StuartT wrote:
rgatijnet1 wrote:
Some COACHES and CHASSIS are built for 1,000,000 miles of use, like the Prevost chassis motor homes. These are the very expensive RV's used by NASCAR teams, Hollywood celebrities, corporations, and anyone else that has the means to afford them. Many of these are listed for sale as used high end coaches, with hundreds of thousands of miles, and they are still going strong, and still fetch some pretty big bucks. These are built on the same chassis as the coast to coast Trailways and Greyhound buses.
Most other diesel coaches fall in the other category and they are NOT designed for a million miles but they can do several hundred thousand miles with proper maintenance. As you read on this forum, diesel engines do break down and DP chassis and suspension items do break.
The facts are that if you do proper maintenance on ANY coach, and replace everything that breaks or wears out, there is no mileage limit. The limit is reached when it is no longer financially feasible or practical to continue to dump money in to a coach that is worn out. That does not mean that an old coach cannot continue to be used, but at a certain point in time, the coach is worth less at resale than the cost needed to keep it running.
Great observations and a well thought out response. In our range of DP's, you point out the absolute need for maintenance, and this is definitely a fact. But would you be afraid to buy a high mileage DP in the first place, given you will face the resale market down the road.
A lot depends on maintenance records and coach features/systems. A low mileage DP could have a coach that is worn out from use by a full time owner, that only traveled from North to South twice a year. In other words, the house will have 365 days worth of use each year but the engine may only have a few weeks of use, and a few thousand miles. This type of coach has spent most of it's life sitting in an RV park and I would pass, unless it was very cheap. Many new buyers love these and will buy them based ONLY on the mileage.
Now you have the coach that is used by people that like to travel a lot, but also still have a stick house. I fall into this category. We usually put close to 20,000 miles per year on our coach but only spend about 6 months on the road each year. Our coach will have high mileage when sold, but it will also have been maintained regularly and systems updated as needed. I expect it will sell below NADA value based on mileage.
There are also the full time coaches that are lived in 365 and are driven 10,000-20,000 miles per year. these are usually meticulously maintained, by virtue of the fact that they are used and driven. I would not hesitate to buy this type of coach, as long as the maintenance records are available.
Unfortunately a lot of people look at the mileage and do not have the slightest idea what maintenance records can tell them. They will be willing to pay more for a low mileage vehicle, and will probably have future problems. Rodents and other critters love low mileage RV's that sit most of the time.
Any vehicle used on a regular basis, and maintained properly, should be worth more and sell easier to a knowledgeable buyer. Finding that buyer is the key.