โMar-15-2015 02:29 PM
โMar-17-2015 06:02 AM
โMar-17-2015 05:21 AM
NMDriver wrote:Feel free to add whatever I missed
You missed saying you do not know much about 5ers and like to make broad generalizations that are not true in detail.
You almost got one right. The one advantage to a class A is your passengers can use the bathroom without pulling over. Although it is not true for the driver and illegal in the US.
However, I am happy with you believing what every makes you happy.
โMar-16-2015 07:33 PM
NMDriver wrote:Feel free to add whatever I missed
You missed saying you do not know much about 5ers and like to make broad generalizations that are not true in detail.
You almost got one right. The one advantage to a class A is your passengers can use the bathroom without pulling over. Although it is not true for the driver and illegal in the US.
However, I am happy with you believing what every makes you happy.
โMar-16-2015 07:31 PM
kaydeejay wrote:1BryNelson wrote:Well, I can only relate my experience and that was a 1999 Coachmen Mirada 300QB, a 30 footer, no slides unit on a V10 F53 chassis.
I have to beg to differ also. My F53 chassis with a 37ft Moho rides fabulous. Everyone who has ridden with me has commcommented on the ride and the power it has to pull hills in such a big rig.
It was positively THE WORST riding vehicle I have ever been in or driven. On other than perfectly smooth roads it was a bone-jarring ride which left me exhausted after less than a couple of hours.If we were on a road with expansion joints the whole coach felt like it was shaking itself apart.
Ford was of no help, neither was Coachmen, which is why I took it to a local truck suspension specialist. This was the outfit who could not believe the cabinets had not ripped out of the ceiling.
We played with tire pressures but beyond that was going to cost big bucks. They suggested Mor-Ryde suspension conversions and Bilstein shocks to the tune of $6000. I passed, at which point I sold it.
My GMC 2500HD truck felt like a Cadillac after that experience!
โMar-16-2015 07:22 PM
Feel free to add whatever I missed
โMar-16-2015 05:31 PM
โMar-16-2015 05:17 PM
et2 wrote:
Having a toad to use all the time vs a dually that usually sat in the drive, priceless. Now we don't have a extra vehicle just sitting that insurance is being paid on. One less vehicle.
Not having to climb over the truck bed to hook and unhook fiver with a bad back - priceless.
waaayy more comfortable to drive and less stress with a MH, rested upon arrival - priceless.
More room ( yes I did say that) vs same size fiver - priceless.
Quiet Diesel generator that runs off MH fuel tank - priceless
Not having to worry about wheel bearings - priceless
Scenery on trips driving way more enjoyable - priceless
Ease to get up and go in a hurry if needed (security reasons) vs sleeping over somewhere for the night traveling in a fiver - priceless ( not needing to clear a path to the tow vehicle).
Can hook the toad up the night before ( and stay level vs a fiver) departure stow the sewer hoses. Just need to pull the power cord and water - quick exit if needed.
Great to be in a MH in a traffic jam vs fiver - priceless
Feel free to add whatever I missed
โMar-16-2015 05:12 PM
โMar-16-2015 03:50 PM
2021 Nexus Viper 27V. Class B+
2019 Ford Ranger 4x4
โMar-16-2015 03:24 PM
msmith1199 wrote:valhalla360 wrote:dons2346 wrote:
Another advantage is when you are in a tight campground and there isn't a pull thru. Spent 20 minutes the other day watching a guy try to park a 5th wheel with his big truck. Spot was a simple one for a MH
How exactly do you back up with the toad attached? Assuming you learn how to back up, the 5th wheel has the advantage.
Also, if you goal is push button ease, you can get generators and auto leveling on a 5th wheel. The only horror, is the 10-15 seconds it takes to walk back in the rain from the truck to the trailer. With the price difference of motorhomes, that's a pretty hefty price to pay for the couple times per year when you might get your hair wet.
We find without rushing, we set up or tear down as quickly as most motorhomes do. It's cheaper and easier to maintain a single drivetrain.
The fuel savings with a toad is largely a myth. With MH's typically getting worse MPG by a significant margin compared to PU's towing, you have to put a lot of miles on the toad to make up the difference. The thing is we usally camp close to what we want to see so we aren't putting a ton of miles on the truck. (You may have a specific usage that differs but for most, I believe you will find the same issue if you run the numbers)
If we were to consider a MH it would be because we have need of a particular TOAD. Say you are into off roading and really want a jeep. That's tough with a 5th wheel unless you want to double tow or the spouse drives seperately. In that case a MH makes a logical choice.
Who said they were going to back up with the toad? If you're backing into a campsite, you certainly aren't going to back the toad into the space. My standard procedure is while the wife goes and checks in, I unhook the toad. Then when she's done checking us in we'll either park the toad by the office and come back and get it later, or she'll drive the toad to the site while I take the motorhome. Pretty simple really. And I've gone camping with friends with trailers and we all get there at the same time and I'm backed in, leveled, slides out, and hookups done in time to go help them back in.
โMar-16-2015 11:06 AM
valhalla360 wrote:dons2346 wrote:
Another advantage is when you are in a tight campground and there isn't a pull thru. Spent 20 minutes the other day watching a guy try to park a 5th wheel with his big truck. Spot was a simple one for a MH
How exactly do you back up with the toad attached? Assuming you learn how to back up, the 5th wheel has the advantage.
Also, if you goal is push button ease, you can get generators and auto leveling on a 5th wheel. The only horror, is the 10-15 seconds it takes to walk back in the rain from the truck to the trailer. With the price difference of motorhomes, that's a pretty hefty price to pay for the couple times per year when you might get your hair wet.
We find without rushing, we set up or tear down as quickly as most motorhomes do. It's cheaper and easier to maintain a single drivetrain.
The fuel savings with a toad is largely a myth. With MH's typically getting worse MPG by a significant margin compared to PU's towing, you have to put a lot of miles on the toad to make up the difference. The thing is we usally camp close to what we want to see so we aren't putting a ton of miles on the truck. (You may have a specific usage that differs but for most, I believe you will find the same issue if you run the numbers)
If we were to consider a MH it would be because we have need of a particular TOAD. Say you are into off roading and really want a jeep. That's tough with a 5th wheel unless you want to double tow or the spouse drives seperately. In that case a MH makes a logical choice.
2021 Nexus Viper 27V. Class B+
2019 Ford Ranger 4x4
โMar-16-2015 11:04 AM
1BryNelson wrote:Well, I can only relate my experience and that was a 1999 Coachmen Mirada 300QB, a 30 footer, no slides unit on a V10 F53 chassis.
I have to beg to differ also. My F53 chassis with a 37ft Moho rides fabulous. Everyone who has ridden with me has commcommented on the ride and the power it has to pull hills in such a big rig.
โMar-16-2015 08:20 AM
kaydeejay wrote:
I went the other way - Class A to a fiver.
Unless you go for a higher level MH, preferably a DP, you will find the ride to be AWFUL.
Mine was a Coachmen on a Ford F53 chassis and it shook the fillings out of my teeth.
Local truck suspension experts couldn't understand how the cabinets had not ripped out of the roof.
Coachmen were of no help "What do you expect, it's a Fedex truck chassis?"
Truck and fiver is a better ride, even if it does bounce on some of the rougher roads.
So, if you go from a Class A, be sure to drive it on some rough roads before you commit to make sure you can live with it.
โMar-16-2015 07:15 AM