โJun-11-2016 09:18 AM
โJun-12-2016 09:00 AM
Gjac wrote:Bruce Brown wrote:I agree with Bruce, the salesmen will focus on the outdoor TV's, indoor fireplaces etc. Look at things like CCC, HP/WT ratio, towing capacity, wt distibution etc. Try to understand the construction process of the MH it self, which is harder to find and understand, the salesmen will only use marketing terms rather than eng specs. All MFG's use the same refers, WH's, AC's furnaces, chassis (Ford or Chevy) so to me brand in and of itself is not important. If you search the type of problems folks on here have with the MH itself, sidewall delaminations, leaks, harsh riding chassis, poor assembly, most can be corrected except for major delaminations. Some MFg's like Newmar and Monaco use hung walls which can't delaminate, which to me is a huge discriminator having fixed and lived with this on my current MH. Design features like being able to access your batteries, gensets, and dump and fill areas are more important to me than the flat screen TV's or surround sound. If all these other reqs were met I would choose a TPO or FG roof over EPDM rubber. Having said that my EPDM roof is 20 years old and has never leaked.
Some companies put their $$$ into fluff, some put it into quality.
You can put lipstick on a pig but it's still a pig.
Look past the fluff and I think you'll see the bigger, more important differences. If you can't see them maybe they're just not important to you.
Remember, even Alfa sold some SeeYa's, (arguably the worst MH ever made) so not everyone values the same things.
โJun-12-2016 08:28 AM
Bruce Brown wrote:I agree with Bruce, the salesmen will focus on the outdoor TV's, indoor fireplaces etc. Look at things like CCC, HP/WT ratio, towing capacity, wt distibution etc. Try to understand the construction process of the MH it self, which is harder to find and understand, the salesmen will only use marketing terms rather than eng specs. All MFG's use the same refers, WH's, AC's furnaces, chassis (Ford or Chevy) so to me brand in and of itself is not important. If you search the type of problems folks on here have with the MH itself, sidewall delaminations, leaks, harsh riding chassis, poor assembly, most can be corrected except for major delaminations. Some MFg's like Newmar and Monaco use hung walls which can't delaminate, which to me is a huge discriminator having fixed and lived with this on my current MH. Design features like being able to access your batteries, gensets, and dump and fill areas are more important to me than the flat screen TV's or surround sound. If all these other reqs were met I would choose a TPO or FG roof over EPDM rubber. Having said that my EPDM roof is 20 years old and has never leaked.
Some companies put their $$$ into fluff, some put it into quality.
You can put lipstick on a pig but it's still a pig.
Look past the fluff and I think you'll see the bigger, more important differences. If you can't see them maybe they're just not important to you.
Remember, even Alfa sold some SeeYa's, (arguably the worst MH ever made) so not everyone values the same things.
โJun-12-2016 06:49 AM
โJun-11-2016 09:09 PM
RLS7201 wrote:xctraveler wrote:
If I remember correctly Winnebago has used drop rail frame for some time now. Tiffins used raised rail which gives some storage above the bottom of the rails, not as easy to access as drop rail storage, but more of it:)
"Seems like Winnebago would adjust their chassis structure to catch up with storage space." would be a major re-engineering starting with a different chassis design. They needed the drop rail for their basement AC among other things.
The class A gas chassis uses the standard frame rails, as delivered by Ford, Chevy or Workhorse.
Richard
โJun-11-2016 08:48 PM
RLS7201 wrote:Andy F wrote:Gjac wrote:
I am not sure of the year Coachmen Mirada that you are looking at but all the ones I have seen have the small cut out doors like on Class C's where as the others have the full basement storage doors. What size are you looking at? I would also look for pass thru basement storage for storing bikes, ladders, tables etc. Some Miradas, have one large pass thru under the rear bed and that may be enough storage for you depending on how you plan to use the MH. To me storage, water, and battery power are more important than the type of awning. Older Bounders were known for their large fresh water tanks.
Water tank capacity is another great feature for the 2016-2017 Bounders. They have a 100 gallon capacity which I believe is the highest among gassers.
What is Fleetwood doing with the design of the Bounder to get water tank capacity up so high and why aren't Newmar and Tiffin doing the same thing? Is it the "rail design" of the chassis?
Fleetwood has done nothing to the chassis to install a 100 gallon fresh water tank. 100 gallons of fresh water was a feature of the first Bounder in 1986. The rest of the manufactures have been playing catch ever since. The 1986 Bounder was also the first gas class A coach with raised floor for pass through storage and first with heated wet bays. If you can find a copy of John Crean's (Fleetwood's founding father) autobiography (The Wheel and I), it's a great read.
Richard
โJun-11-2016 08:28 PM
Andy F wrote:Gjac wrote:
I am not sure of the year Coachmen Mirada that you are looking at but all the ones I have seen have the small cut out doors like on Class C's where as the others have the full basement storage doors. What size are you looking at? I would also look for pass thru basement storage for storing bikes, ladders, tables etc. Some Miradas, have one large pass thru under the rear bed and that may be enough storage for you depending on how you plan to use the MH. To me storage, water, and battery power are more important than the type of awning. Older Bounders were known for their large fresh water tanks.
Water tank capacity is another great feature for the 2016-2017 Bounders. They have a 100 gallon capacity which I believe is the highest among gassers.
What is Fleetwood doing with the design of the Bounder to get water tank capacity up so high and why aren't Newmar and Tiffin doing the same thing? Is it the "rail design" of the chassis?
โJun-11-2016 06:18 PM
Gjac wrote:
I am not sure of the year Coachmen Mirada that you are looking at but all the ones I have seen have the small cut out doors like on Class C's where as the others have the full basement storage doors. What size are you looking at? I would also look for pass thru basement storage for storing bikes, ladders, tables etc. Some Miradas, have one large pass thru under the rear bed and that may be enough storage for you depending on how you plan to use the MH. To me storage, water, and battery power are more important than the type of awning. Older Bounders were known for their large fresh water tanks.
โJun-11-2016 06:16 PM
Gjac wrote:
I am not sure of the year Coachmen Mirada that you are looking at but all the ones I have seen have the small cut out doors like on Class C's where as the others have the full basement storage doors. What size are you looking at? I would also look for pass thru basement storage for storing bikes, ladders, tables etc. Some Miradas, have one large pass thru under the rear bed and that may be enough storage for you depending on how you plan to use the MH. To me storage, water, and battery power are more important than the type of awning. Older Bounders were known for their large fresh water tanks.
โJun-11-2016 06:14 PM
xctraveler wrote:
If I remember correctly Winnebago has used drop rail frame for some time now. Tiffins used raised rail which gives some storage above the bottom of the rails, not as easy to access as drop rail storage, but more of it:)
"Seems like Winnebago would adjust their chassis structure to catch up with storage space." would be a major re-engineering starting with a different chassis design. They needed the drop rail for their basement AC among other things.
โJun-11-2016 04:55 PM
โJun-11-2016 03:07 PM
xctraveler wrote:
If I remember correctly Winnebago has used drop rail frame for some time now. Tiffins used raised rail which gives some storage above the bottom of the rails, not as easy to access as drop rail storage, but more of it:)
"Seems like Winnebago would adjust their chassis structure to catch up with storage space." would be a major re-engineering starting with a different chassis design. They needed the drop rail for their basement AC among other things.
โJun-11-2016 02:05 PM
โJun-11-2016 01:24 PM
โJun-11-2016 01:19 PM
RLS7201 wrote:
Bounder is now a "higher end" class A gas coach. Makes me chuckle.
It was introduced in 1986 as an entry level coach. How times have changed.
Richard
95 "lower end" Bounder. GRIN
โJun-11-2016 01:06 PM