Tiger, This may help...... a comparo I did for someone a while ago on LP vs Diesel Onans in Winnebagos. Cost advantage, weight advantage, power advantage at altitude and higher temperatures & separate fuel system, all go to the LP 3200. Although some of the advantages are narrow, weight for example, it may be only important if your weight capacity is small. Fuel consumption difference in lbs/hour is insignificant but the edge goes to the diesel if you are running at near rated output by a schoche if at moderate temperatures and altitude. Not significant since one hardly runs max output. The edge goes back to the LP's slightly lower consumption at mid-power output. Maintenance appears to favor the LP version due to diesels having the problems of all diesels... carbon, gumming up, fuel problems, etc.. LP burns cleaner and should 'theoretically' have less unscheduled maintenance/repairs. Significant disadvantage for LP is that it may have vaporization problems down around 20F. Do you camp in below freezing weather? No discussion about gelling diesel at those temps... which could be a problem. Last, you are going to carry LP anyway as the WH, fridge, heater all run off LP.
Noise levels are the same. Except.... diesels import more low frequency sound wave and vibration into the large panels in the coach. They have an annoying (to us) low throbbing noise inside and out side. The LP does not. Diesel is also stinky running.... your neighbors might appreciate that an LP does not smell as badly.
As before, if it's a diesel and on a Sprinter chassis, you can only access the upper 3/4s of the fuel tank. The wisdom of a seemingly endless diesel fuel supply is illusion. For a Sprinter, assuming a full 20 gallon tank, roughly 15 gallons is available to the generator ... MINUS what ever you have used getting to the campsite. So if you used 15 gallons getting there you have only have 5 for the generator before it shuts down... and that remaining 5 gallons is needed to get to more fuel .. not counting the 5 gallon Sprinter reserve. A working Class C Sprinter will get about 14-16 MPG. OTH, with an LP system you can arrive at the campsite with a near full LP tank with careful LP management it can last a long time.... and you don't eat into your diesel fuel. (MPG on a working 3.0L turbo diesel Sprinter Class C is about 14-15 MPG on the flats ... less in hills. So once you suck down to 1/4 tank you only have 5 + 5 gallon reserve. That's about 140-150 miles. Class C out of fuel is a really big boat anchor.....)
Quick assessment:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0BzXeY3pXinO9SldITzlGNHFUNGs/view?usp=sharing
Old Crow