โOct-04-2014 09:14 PM
โNov-01-2014 09:27 AM
redguard wrote:rgatijnet1 wrote:
From my own experience with the Prevost chassis is that they are built for continuous duty and designed for long life, high mileage, applications. That is why they are used primarily by NASCAR drivers, celebrities, and other notables that criss-cross the country on a daily basis. Their livelihood depends on them getting from point A to point B and they cannot afford the occasional breakdown/delay that the rest of us have to endure in a "standard" RV. Prevost chassis coaches are built to last 1,000,000 miles as a minimum with minimal interruption of service.
I've put several thousand miles on a Liberty Prevost and all I can say is that other DP's are just wannabes. The only comparison between a Prevost chassis and a sub $500,000 DP is that they all have the engine in the rear.
Based on millions of miles of experience, Prevost knows what will last and what will not. I believe that the Prevost still comes with a two piece windshield. Many others have tried the one piece windshield, AND failed miserably. A Prevost will not shake itself apart on the road, like other coaches. They are designed for reliable long distance travel that usually includes things like 1500+ mile fuel range, large fresh water and waste water tanks, generators so quiet that you have to be right next to one to hear it running, copper plumbing, 20,000 trailer hitch as a standard, engine fires suppression system as standard, and so on.
They are not practical for everyone but are unbeatable if you plan to put tens of thousands of miles on your coach each year.
The only BAD BAD part of a prevost converted bus to mh is the poor power.515HP especially pulling 10K is pathetic.My good friend owns one(2009) and when loaded he goes up mountain passes extremely slow
and is slow on stop sign exceleration etc.
โNov-01-2014 09:25 AM
โNov-01-2014 09:18 AM
rgatijnet1 wrote:
From my own experience with the Prevost chassis is that they are built for continuous duty and designed for long life, high mileage, applications. That is why they are used primarily by NASCAR drivers, celebrities, and other notables that criss-cross the country on a daily basis. Their livelihood depends on them getting from point A to point B and they cannot afford the occasional breakdown/delay that the rest of us have to endure in a "standard" RV. Prevost chassis coaches are built to last 1,000,000 miles as a minimum with minimal interruption of service.
I've put several thousand miles on a Liberty Prevost and all I can say is that other DP's are just wannabes. The only comparison between a Prevost chassis and a sub $500,000 DP is that they all have the engine in the rear.
Based on millions of miles of experience, Prevost knows what will last and what will not. I believe that the Prevost still comes with a two piece windshield. Many others have tried the one piece windshield, AND failed miserably. A Prevost will not shake itself apart on the road, like other coaches. They are designed for reliable long distance travel that usually includes things like 1500+ mile fuel range, large fresh water and waste water tanks, generators so quiet that you have to be right next to one to hear it running, copper plumbing, 20,000 trailer hitch as a standard, engine fires suppression system as standard, and so on.
They are not practical for everyone but are unbeatable if you plan to put tens of thousands of miles on your coach each year.
โNov-01-2014 09:05 AM
rgatijnet1 wrote:
From my own experience with the Prevost chassis is that they are built for continuous duty and designed for long life, high mileage, applications. That is why they are used primarily by NASCAR drivers, celebrities, and other notables that criss-cross the country on a daily basis. Their livelihood depends on them getting from point A to point B and they cannot afford the occasional breakdown/delay that the rest of us have to endure in a "standard" RV. Prevost chassis coaches are built to last 1,000,000 miles as a minimum with minimal interruption of service.
I've put several thousand miles on a Liberty Prevost and all I can say is that other DP's are just wannabes. The only comparison between a Prevost chassis and a sub $500,000 DP is that they all have the engine in the rear.
Based on millions of miles of experience, Prevost knows what will last and what will not. I believe that the Prevost still comes with a two piece windshield. Many others have tried the one piece windshield, AND failed miserably. A Prevost will not shake itself apart on the road, like other coaches. They are designed for reliable long distance travel that usually includes things like 1500+ mile fuel range, large fresh water and waste water tanks, generators so quiet that you have to be right next to one to hear it running, copper plumbing, 20,000 trailer hitch as a standard, engine fires suppression system as standard, and so on.
They are not practical for everyone but are unbeatable if you plan to put tens of thousands of miles on your coach each year.
โNov-01-2014 05:46 AM
โNov-01-2014 05:05 AM
โNov-01-2014 04:47 AM
โOct-11-2014 03:00 PM
JTHarley wrote:Bigdog wrote:
Sure they're cool to look at, but I really don't feel out of place in my '01 Tradewinds LTC when I'm parking next to one. The one that I liked was my neighbor at Oasis in Vegas that had sold his 1.8M Prevost to his best friend for 1.5M and was waiting to take delivery on his new 45' Dynamax quad slide.I asked him why and he said that the Prevost actually had some things he didn't like and also, the Dynamax had a 40K tow rate and his cargo trailer weighed in at 25K.
I have also stayed at Pacific in Newport and you can stay there if you meet certain standards and there are spaces available.
That is so funnyโฆ..I sold my 45' Dynamax with quad slides for my prevost. The Dynamax Grand Sport Ultra was an amazing machine and I really liked it but my wife was not crazy about the "truck" drive and feel compared to the prevost. Amazing as it may seem, even though the dynamax is a $500K coach there where many resorts that turned me away because it wasn't a class Aโฆ..oh well, there was always someone right down the road willing to take my cashโฆโฆ.LOL
โOct-11-2014 12:11 PM
Bigdog wrote:
Sure they're cool to look at, but I really don't feel out of place in my '01 Tradewinds LTC when I'm parking next to one. The one that I liked was my neighbor at Oasis in Vegas that had sold his 1.8M Prevost to his best friend for 1.5M and was waiting to take delivery on his new 45' Dynamax quad slide.I asked him why and he said that the Prevost actually had some things he didn't like and also, the Dynamax had a 40K tow rate and his cargo trailer weighed in at 25K.
I have also stayed at Pacific in Newport and you can stay there if you meet certain standards and there are spaces available.
โOct-10-2014 11:13 PM
โOct-10-2014 12:21 PM
Effy wrote:
Stayed at a class a resort in lauderdale last year and it was nothing but prevosts. Must have been 50 or more. A majority Canadian. We must have looked like the groundskeepers in our tiny little mh.
โOct-10-2014 05:45 AM
โOct-09-2014 05:02 PM
Executive wrote:
They just had a big rally in Alabama.....We are on Hilton Head Island and there are probably 10 in here.....Dennis
โOct-05-2014 07:34 PM
koda55 wrote:
We stay at Walmarts and run our genny all night long. We have never had any problems. We also stay at truck stops and run it all night there.
THOSE THAT DO NOT KNOW HISTORY ARE DOOMED TO REPEAT IT
โOct-05-2014 07:27 PM