โNov-25-2019 11:30 AM
โDec-06-2019 12:39 PM
โDec-05-2019 10:39 AM
coalminingman wrote:
I HAVE 2018 CLASS C 27' SUNSEEKER V10 6 SPEED. ON 5000 MILE TRIP IN OCTOBER I AVERAGED 8 MPH. I HAD A 2004 CLASS A 34' WITH V10 AND IT GOT 8 MPH.BOTH BOUGHT NEW.
โDec-05-2019 10:37 AM
โDec-04-2019 07:51 AM
jjrbus wrote:
Been thinking about getting a newer class C for some time, seems the most common 24 foot or under on the used market is the V10. After following this thread and reading about repair costs on the V10, The community has convinced me to keep my Toyota V6 until it falls apart like some Keystone Cops movie.
I would like to have more power so will be watching for a Toyota 3.4 donor vehicle.
โDec-04-2019 07:39 AM
ron.dittmer wrote:Grit dog wrote:I do agree with Grit dog that the Ford V10 (at least ours) has been trouble-free for 12 years. We do park it indoors which helps immensely.jjrbus wrote:You can get um with a 5.4 Ford (which yields no benefit to the V10, really) and 6.0 Chevy.
Been thinking about getting a newer class C for some time, seems the most common 24 foot or under on the used market is the V10. After following this thread and reading about repair costs on the V10, The community has convinced me to keep my Toyota V6 until it falls apart like some Keystone Cops movie.
I would like to have more power so will be watching for a Toyota 3.4 donor vehicle.
Either way, you're comparing apples to oranges between an old mini C Toyota chassis and a full size class 3 or 4 chassis with a much larger "house" on the back.
If Ford V10s scare you for repairs, then, maybe better off with a bicycle. One of the most dependable engines out there, save for spark plug spitters, which anymore is a somewhat rare occurrence and known and easy, economical repair. Other than that, bulletproof. Honestly, I wouldn't let the internet scare you away from a V10 Ford.....and I'm not even a Ford fan! lol
There are a rare few 5.4L-V8 E350 chassis rigs out there, but they will max out around 22 feet in length. From threads posted over the years, I gather it yields a 10% improvement in fuel economy which compares to the Chevy chassis with it's larger engine.
If shopping around for a low-priced used shorter rig maxing out around 24 feet, I advise to limit yourself no older than a 2005 (or is it a 2006) not only to avoid the earlier spark plug issues with the V10 engine resolved in 2004, but most beneficial to get the next generation transmission that yields better engine performance along with improved fuel economy.
โDec-04-2019 07:29 AM
Grit dog wrote:I do agree with Grit dog that the Ford V10 (at least ours) has been trouble-free for 12 years. We do park it indoors which helps immensely.jjrbus wrote:You can get um with a 5.4 Ford (which yields no benefit to the V10, really) and 6.0 Chevy.
Been thinking about getting a newer class C for some time, seems the most common 24 foot or under on the used market is the V10. After following this thread and reading about repair costs on the V10, The community has convinced me to keep my Toyota V6 until it falls apart like some Keystone Cops movie.
I would like to have more power so will be watching for a Toyota 3.4 donor vehicle.
Either way, you're comparing apples to oranges between an old mini C Toyota chassis and a full size class 3 or 4 chassis with a much larger "house" on the back.
If Ford V10s scare you for repairs, then, maybe better off with a bicycle. One of the most dependable engines out there, save for spark plug spitters, which anymore is a somewhat rare occurrence and known and easy, economical repair. Other than that, bulletproof. Honestly, I wouldn't let the internet scare you away from a V10 Ford.....and I'm not even a Ford fan! lol
โDec-04-2019 07:11 AM
jjrbus wrote:
Been thinking about getting a newer class C for some time, seems the most common 24 foot or under on the used market is the V10. After following this thread and reading about repair costs on the V10, The community has convinced me to keep my Toyota V6 until it falls apart like some Keystone Cops movie.
I would like to have more power so will be watching for a Toyota 3.4 donor vehicle.
โDec-04-2019 05:37 AM
jjrbus wrote:For 24 years, we owned a motor home built on top of a 1983 Toyota 2.4L-L4 carbureted engine with a 4-speed manual trans. The engine was rated at 96hp. It was a real slug. 57mph was the sweet spot to achieve 20mpg. Going faster did not save time because of stopping so frequently for gas.
Been thinking about getting a newer class C for some time, seems the most common 24 foot or under on the used market is the V10. After following this thread and reading about repair costs on the V10, The community has convinced me to keep my Toyota V6 until it falls apart like some Keystone Cops movie.
I would like to have more power so will be watching for a Toyota 3.4 donor vehicle.
โDec-04-2019 04:24 AM
โDec-01-2019 08:19 AM
ron.dittmer wrote:overdrive75 wrote:Hmm...pushtoy 2 wrote:This is the real answer here.
Thanks for all the replies. I guess I am right in the ball park pulling a 3500lb. car and fully loaded I am getting 6.5 to 7 on a mostly flat road but in the mountains all bets are off. I don't check it then.
I get between 6.5 and 8 mpg depending on conditions, generator running or not. I am always towing a toad that scales out at about 5k lbs for the road.
Mine is a real answer too. My numbers are calculated at the end of the trip with consideration to our Onan-4000 generator usage of 1/2 gallon per hour. Our trips are between 4000 to 6000 miles so there are a lot of miles and conditions considered in my declared fuel economy. My mpg numbers posted a couple of replies earlier are as accurate as I could get.
We do live near Chicago, so many of our miles are interstate-driven across the Great Plains.
Now I could post better numbers yet if I considered the fuel economy of the tow vehicle. Those miles keep the motor home at the campsite. But I never track the tow vehicle so I am unable to consider it in trip averaging.
โDec-01-2019 02:31 AM
โNov-30-2019 10:11 PM
โNov-30-2019 03:56 PM
โNov-30-2019 06:14 AM
overdrive75 wrote:Hmm...pushtoy 2 wrote:This is the real answer here.
Thanks for all the replies. I guess I am right in the ball park pulling a 3500lb. car and fully loaded I am getting 6.5 to 7 on a mostly flat road but in the mountains all bets are off. I don't check it then.
I get between 6.5 and 8 mpg depending on conditions, generator running or not. I am always towing a toad that scales out at about 5k lbs for the road.