โMay-17-2020 09:03 AM
โMay-19-2020 05:26 AM
pianotuna wrote:Rear disk brakes became the standard for the E350 a few years after 1997, maybe when the E450 was introduced.
Ron,
My 2005 has disk brakes. I've replaced the rear brakes 3 times since 2009. I've driven it about 120 miles and I try to avoid using the brakes when ever possible.5
โMay-18-2020 01:50 PM
โMay-18-2020 12:17 PM
โMay-18-2020 11:57 AM
โMay-18-2020 10:50 AM
Bumpyroad wrote:klutchdust wrote:Bumpyroad wrote:
My concern would be that 5 to 7 years down the road you may have trouble getting anything for it so it all depends on the cost, assuming other issues are no problem.
bumpy
Anything meaning what, house or chassis? Chassis parts are readily available, maybe the shiny do-hickey
moulding may be unavailable but then there is always Walt's in Riverside.
anything as in $$$ selling it or unloading it. I believe that the OPs response indicated he understood me.
bumpy
โMay-18-2020 09:21 AM
Xavpil wrote:
I donโt plan on keeping it that long actually
I am too young to retire and enjoy the open roads weeks at a time. I just want to go on my dream road trip cross country while I have the luxury of being able to work remotely
โMay-18-2020 09:02 AM
Xavpil wrote:BFL13 wrote:
Suggest you are a good candidate for renting a Class C.
Renting prices are out of this world, $300/day, and limited to 100 miles/day, unless I am not looking at the right vendors
โMay-18-2020 08:48 AM
โMay-18-2020 08:27 AM
BFL13 wrote:
Suggest you are a good candidate for renting a Class C.
โMay-18-2020 08:22 AM
โMay-18-2020 08:03 AM
โMay-18-2020 07:37 AM
klutchdust wrote:Bumpyroad wrote:
My concern would be that 5 to 7 years down the road you may have trouble getting anything for it so it all depends on the cost, assuming other issues are no problem.
bumpy
Anything meaning what, house or chassis? Chassis parts are readily available, maybe the shiny do-hickey
moulding may be unavailable but then there is always Walt's in Riverside.
โMay-18-2020 07:20 AM
Bumpyroad wrote:
My concern would be that 5 to 7 years down the road you may have trouble getting anything for it so it all depends on the cost, assuming other issues are no problem.
bumpy
โMay-18-2020 07:13 AM
โMay-18-2020 05:41 AM
Xavpil wrote:There is no rule of thumb with age. If it smells good inside (no moldy smell) and there are no water stains on the interior walls, especially in the cab-over bed area, then at the right price, that rig might be worth considering.
I did my due diligence and read the FAQ and also did a search
I am looking at a 97 Winnebago Minnie Winnie with a ford engine with 47,000 miles on it.
It looks great cosmetically and drives good. But I know this is the tip of the iceberg and it will require a thorough inspection.
It is my first RV. Iโd take it across country.
I know it depends on a lot of factors but is there a rule of thumb that says RVs shouldnโt be older than....
Thx guys