First thing about warranties.
An RV is NOT a vehicle, it is a home. And like a house the builder (manufacturer) is only responsible for the shell construction, base utilities and such.
You have to deal with the manufacturer of the fridge, the furnace, the water heater.
Because of the movement potential of an RV, you may have to deal with the axle manufacturer (Dexter in our case), the company who built the jacks and slides hardware (Lippert in our case).
You also have two separate electrical systems - 120V AC and 12V DC - which requires special hardware.
And you have less than 1/4 the electrical power of a new home, 1/2 of an older home. Usually less than a small apartment - when hooked up to the power grid.
If you have a motorhome, you have to deal with the engine and chassis manufacturer.
There are two keys to being comfortable with an RV warranty.
1) Buy from a reputable dealer, and only use that dealer. We bought our TT from a company in Texas with a good reputation, and I must say, they have bent over backwards to get the rig worked on quickly, work with the various manufacturers, and get use back on the road as full-timers. And we have dealt with their locations in Mesquite, Canton, Boerne and Sequin Texas.
But when the Dexter axle broke a weld, a bad weld on the mounting bracket from their robot welder being out of position, it took 31 days to get the two replacement axles from Dexter. And we had to pay for shipping. An Extra-Ride extended warranty paid the installation labor. That was Dexter's fault, not the dealer.
They called me at 10 am and said the truck had delivered the axles, and the trailer would be ready to pickup at 3. It was.
2) Forget the warranty and deal with mobile RV service techs. Especially if you plan to travel. Put the money for an extended warranty into a bank account and only use it for repairs.
It is not uncommon for a dealer to not order the parts until they have the rig on their lot. RVs are highly customized compared to vehicles. And the manufacturers do not have regional warehouses full of parts ready to be delivered in a few hours/ overnight. (The market is too small).
Our experience with Dexter is an example. I could buy the axles from one of four suppliers in the Dallas/ Fort Worth area. But they would not be welded to the proper brackets to attach the axles to the Forest River TT. And any welding not done at their manufacturing plant voids any warranty.
Suburban did drop ship a new water heater to the one RV dealer in Connecticut who handled their warranty work. We had to pay for a service call to come out and install it. Cash off the books.
(It was 65 miles on US-6 - a 3 1/2 to 4 hour journey through an almost constant urban area, or 93 miles on CT-8, I-84, I-691, I-91, I-384 to the dealer - 3 to 3 1/2 hours).
FloJet refused to deal with a mobile tech for the water pump not working right. They wanted me to take the TT to a dealer near Fort Lauderdale. The dealer said they would give me an appointment to bring the rig to their lot in seven weeks, and it would be at least four weeks before they could look at the water pump.
We paid the mobile tech cash to replace it, after a trip to Chase.
Mostly, we use mobile RV techs. The campgrounds can recommend someone, and a little research can find a good one. The good ones are busy. And they don't get paid until they FIX the problem.
Full-Time 2014 - ????
โNot all who wander are lost.โ
"You were supposed to turn back at the last street."
2012 Ram 2500 Mega Cab
2014 Flagstaff 832IKBS TT