Hi, We have a 2013 Pursuit 31ft. I bought it after looking at everything in that price range and up about 30k higher. I love the Ford chassis, and the floor plan is very nice. I've had a couple of motorhomes briefly, and we have a travel trailer set up out west.
The fit and finish is where you might have some complaints, but on mine, the workmanship appears to be similar to others I've seen in that ballpark. I think they all will have problems, and can all use some careful going over, even brand new. On mine, I had a loose wire, couple circuits that didn't get completed, an open crack in the caulking at the front cap/TPO roof line (Eternabond taped the whole seam). However, it was all easily fixed, and I DID take it without the extensive walk thru, knowing that I was going to take it apart to add inverter, solar panels, L.E.D. lights, power transfer switches, satellite tv, and seelevel tank monitors, and black water flush.
Basically, I thought it was a great deal for a new vehicle, new systems, durable outside walls, metal framing, and I still think so after a few thousand miles. I personally have never gotten any satisfaction from warranties anytime, anywhere, from any entity. But, I don't go for the super high-end merch, like Mercedes, where they might actually act right for a warranty problem. I think that it's so modular of a product, that I can figure out how to fix whatever's broken. The stuff I'm not great at, like computer controlled engine ignition, is all new and proven design. I most likely will never see the dealer for warranty work, unless something really major pops up soon.
I'm going to be pulling a big trailer, and am about to add a rear track bar. So far, we love the improvements, and feel that we can bolt in another piece of furniture, if we feel that we just have to have a more plush couch, for instance. So, it's all working fine, and coming from having much older MH's, I love the drop down bed for the kids, the power awnings, cameras, awesome HP, large tanks, rot-proof exterior walls, 2 slides, WORKING hydraulic levelers, and that kind of stuff that the old ones didn't seem to have.
We love having a new one, and since the depreciation is so heavy on any new vehicle, I wanted the lower priced model that I could customize. If you want a perfect MH that will never have a failure, good luck finding that. But, all the systems that are attached to this box are found on lots of campers and seem easy to work on. This site has been great for getting ideas and technical help.
For reference, I didn't mind living in new or used mobile homes for a chunk of my working life, even though I could get offended aesthetically by random staple gun construction. I would rate the Pursuit above my last new mobile home in terms of details and finish. Many of the hardware solutions you will find are on the inexpensive side, but it does all work fine. You're getting a lot for the money, and there's a small margin, I would imagine, so prepare your spouse for the fact that all of these things have some 'punch-list' items, even after driving it home, new. If you don't like to fiddle with stuff, you'll probably want to find a great repair shop nearby, not necessarily a dealer, since they all use similar systems and chassis.
We looked at the ACE and Thor, but didn't like them nearly as much based on layout. Look online at the prices for whatever you get, they're pretty good right now!
PS, the guy at the factory was nice, but I still haven't gotten any schematics yet, and don't expect I will. Old school wire tracing for a few problems resulted.
Coachmen Pursuit 31BDP 2013, 300w solar, 1200w sine inverter, In-motion Winegard Dome sat. ant., L.E.D. lights, P2 brake controller, Yamaha 250 on back carrier, or pulling Stehl dolly with Hyundai Santa Fe