โOct-05-2014 10:09 AM
โJul-15-2015 03:17 PM
matt_r wrote:
My only regret was not getting the thermal pane windows. Highly recommend for cold-season and/or PNW.
Best of luck
โJul-15-2015 02:23 PM
โJul-15-2015 01:43 PM
โJul-14-2015 06:54 PM
โJul-14-2015 05:28 PM
โJul-14-2015 05:20 PM
n7bsn wrote:
The Arctic Fox is a little more "up scale" then the Timber Ridge.
โJul-14-2015 05:16 PM
โNov-05-2014 02:50 PM
โOct-31-2014 07:40 PM
โOct-31-2014 05:10 PM
โOct-31-2014 12:22 PM
WesHawkins wrote:
Brulaz
I think I am still leaning toward the Creek Side or one of the Outdoors RV line trailers. I've got a 2000 Dodge 2500 Diesel that has a towing capacity of 9400# but I still want to keep the weight down if I can. The small things that I find not to my liking can be changed out to suit what I want relatively easily. I do all of my own repairs and modifications, except for replacing major things like walls and panels. Their chassis and frames off set the minor issues I'm looking at. With our 2011 Heartland North Trail I had to reinforce the underside of the shower, replace the water pump, repair hinges on the cabinets and have the front bonded panel replaced because it separated in about twenty places all in about a year and a half. Of course when I contacted Heart Land all I got was sorry its out of warranty. Had to contact the Pres and they finally provided the materials to fix it but it still cost me over $900.00 to have repaired. It was like pulling teeth to get them to do anything with that issue, so of course I won't buy another Heartland product.
โOct-30-2014 08:15 AM
โOct-28-2014 04:32 PM
โOct-28-2014 09:35 AM
WesHawkins wrote:
...
I looked at a OutdoorsRV Creek Side 23rks yesterday and was a little disappointed with the medicine cabinet over the sink in the unit. It was a cheap plastic cabinet. It just didn't fit with the rest of the quality in the trailer. I know it seems insignificant but it makes me wonder about their supposed quality now. I do like their chassis on these units but it just seems like they got cheap on the little things. Faucets also seemed cheap and felt like they were plastic.
...