Understand that you are getting peoples opinions and judge accordingly
You asked for it, here is my 2 cents worth.
All the things you mention are good ideas, except the washer combo, takes forever to dry a pair of jeans, I will leave it with- we wanted the storage space plus most campgrounds have a laundromat.
ONE thing that should not be overlooked is the size of the holding tanks. Our Phaeton holds 100 gallons of fresh water, 50 black and 70 grey. This is important if you want to ever boondock or stay at a Wal-mart campground. We can go a week on the water before needing to dump.
A residential refrig means more 6 volt batteries, less time boondocking before needing to charge those batteries.
A straight axle front end will give you rocking motion that independent front suspension does not.
You need to make a list of the things you desire, including floor plan and STICK to it when you decide to buy.
Also consider length, it is a lot easier to drive a 40 foot coach as opposed to a short wheel base one. Plus you will have space to move around. NOT commenting on short coaches, just an observation.
Any coach you purchase should have a 3000 MH or larger transmission for when you are towing. Shorter coaches have smaller transmissions in them.
2003 brought the first EPA regulations requiring catalytic converters and EGR valves. 2006 brought in a "collector for the exhaust that is expensive to replace. 2010 brought us the urea system, personally I feel it also is expensive for the urea that is required to keep the coach running.
Hope this helps
ALL WHO WANDER ARE NOT LOST,
Mike, Jill and our dog Goshe
Our Booger dog is with us in a custom urn, miss ya Boogs
2003 Tiffin Phaeton, Roadmaster tow products, 2016 Jeep Cherokee
Good Sam, SKP, FMCA F292654