Jan-05-2017 10:56 AM
Jan-07-2017 09:29 AM
Jan-07-2017 08:57 AM
msmith1199 wrote:It's a closer comparison than your Chevy pickup!Mile High wrote:msmith1199 wrote:
My motorhome is a 2004 with a Cat diesel and currently has about 50,000 miles on it. I have had it since new. In 13 years I have never had to repair a single thing related to the drive train. Nothing has ever broke. I do live in California so I can easily take my motorhome for a drive anytime I want so if you live in a place you have to winterize it then you have to deal with that. Whether I'm doing it right or wrong all I can tell you is 13 years with zero mechanical repair bills tells me I must be doing something right.
I guess we all have our success stories based on diverse experiences - Bought our new 2003 5th wheel with Onan 5500 generator and we transferred it into 2 other 5th wheels over 13 years until we sold it last May in our last 5er. Sat 9 months every single winter for 13 years - never touched it. Temperatures down to -20. Changed oil 3 times in 13 years. Every spring it started and never missed a beat. It's still running today with the new owner. If it were up to Onan, I would be out there with a portable heater under it trying to start it every month to spin the armature.
You're comparing a generator to a motorhome????
Jan-07-2017 08:38 AM
msmith1199 wrote:ricelake922 wrote:
Hello. Numerous people on this site say that a RV (class A Diesel) should not sit for a long period of time. How long is long? What if you are at a park and not planning to go out of the park in the immediate future. Is running the RV in the park enough exercise and if yes for how long? If no how long does one need to drive it out of the park to give it the required exercise? Thank you in advance.
I'm no expert like all the others on here, but I'll tell you I once bought a Chev pickup many years ago. I think it was about 8 years old at the time I bought it and it had less than 20,000 miles on it. The guy I bought it from told me he only used it in the summer to pull his trailer and 7 to 8 months out of the year it would sit in his driveway complete unused. He would take the battery out and not put it back in until camping season. I thought I was getting a good deal on such a low mileage vehicle. And it ran great for about two months, then the problems started. I can't even remember most of them but I remember the big items. Like a new transmission, a 8valve job, new rear brake drums, and a list of other things. And every single problem was related to letting it sit too long without running it according to the mechanics.
Now it was a gas engine versus a diesel and it wasn't a motorhome, but it taught me a lesson. I rarely go longer than a month without taking the motorhome out for a drive. I don't drive 100 miles or for several hours, but I do take it out to the freeway and down to the next ramp and then back around. Probably a 10 mile circle and I let the engine run for at least 30 minutes. The reason I drive it is more than just to put a load on the engine. It's to make sure everything else spins and distributes the lube too. The drive axels, tranny, wheel bearings, etc.
My motorhome is a 2004 with a Cat diesel and currently has about 50,000 miles on it. I have had it since new. In 13 years I have never had to repair a single thing related to the drive train. Nothing has ever broke. I do live in California so I can easily take my motorhome for a drive anytime I want so if you live in a place you have to winterize it then you have to deal with that. Whether I'm doing it right or wrong all I can tell you is 13 years with zero mechanical repair bills tells me I must be doing something right.
Rally's attended so far-21
Jan-07-2017 08:20 AM
Jan-07-2017 07:08 AM
Mile High wrote:msmith1199 wrote:
My motorhome is a 2004 with a Cat diesel and currently has about 50,000 miles on it. I have had it since new. In 13 years I have never had to repair a single thing related to the drive train. Nothing has ever broke. I do live in California so I can easily take my motorhome for a drive anytime I want so if you live in a place you have to winterize it then you have to deal with that. Whether I'm doing it right or wrong all I can tell you is 13 years with zero mechanical repair bills tells me I must be doing something right.
I guess we all have our success stories based on diverse experiences - Bought our new 2003 5th wheel with Onan 5500 generator and we transferred it into 2 other 5th wheels over 13 years until we sold it last May in our last 5er. Sat 9 months every single winter for 13 years - never touched it. Temperatures down to -20. Changed oil 3 times in 13 years. Every spring it started and never missed a beat. It's still running today with the new owner. If it were up to Onan, I would be out there with a portable heater under it trying to start it every month to spin the armature.
2021 Nexus Viper 27V. Class B+
2019 Ford Ranger 4x4
Jan-06-2017 03:13 PM
msmith1199 wrote:
My motorhome is a 2004 with a Cat diesel and currently has about 50,000 miles on it. I have had it since new. In 13 years I have never had to repair a single thing related to the drive train. Nothing has ever broke. I do live in California so I can easily take my motorhome for a drive anytime I want so if you live in a place you have to winterize it then you have to deal with that. Whether I'm doing it right or wrong all I can tell you is 13 years with zero mechanical repair bills tells me I must be doing something right.
Jan-06-2017 11:18 AM
ricelake922 wrote:
Hello. Numerous people on this site say that a RV (class A Diesel) should not sit for a long period of time. How long is long? What if you are at a park and not planning to go out of the park in the immediate future. Is running the RV in the park enough exercise and if yes for how long? If no how long does one need to drive it out of the park to give it the required exercise? Thank you in advance.
2021 Nexus Viper 27V. Class B+
2019 Ford Ranger 4x4
Jan-06-2017 10:24 AM
Jan-06-2017 09:42 AM
Bill.Satellite wrote:msmith1199 wrote:
There's some advice that's all over the board!!
While this ^^^^ is not helpful ^^^^^, the reality is that you should NOT "exercise" (start) your engine while parked. You need to drive the RV 25+ miles if you plan to start it. If that's not in the plan then there is no reason to start the engine.
It's likely also not necessary to run the genset while parked but if you do then you should load it up to about a 50 percent load and let it run for an hour or so. Unload it, let it cool down for a few minutes and then shut the generator down with no load.
2021 Nexus Viper 27V. Class B+
2019 Ford Ranger 4x4
Jan-06-2017 04:00 AM
Jan-05-2017 09:45 PM
Jan-05-2017 09:29 PM
Jan-05-2017 03:21 PM
msmith1199 wrote:
There's some advice that's all over the board!!
Jan-05-2017 03:08 PM
2021 Nexus Viper 27V. Class B+
2019 Ford Ranger 4x4