Sep-13-2018 07:04 AM
Sep-16-2018 08:37 AM
IAJack wrote:
Well, I ended up buying a used 2011 Lance 1881 today for 11,000. It had everything I wanted including a walk around bed, dual axle, lightweight, WDH included, and it is in good shape. The best part is I paid cash so I am not upside down on it.
Sep-16-2018 08:31 AM
IAJack wrote:
Well, I ended up buying a used 2011 Lance 1881 today for 11,000. It had everything I wanted including a walk around bed, dual axle, lightweight, WDH included, and it is in good shape. The best part is I paid cash so I am not upside down on it.
Sep-16-2018 08:09 AM
Atlee wrote:
Dang. Wish I had known earlier that my 2017 Jayco Jay Flight 23RB was going to fall apart, and rot away shortly after the 2 year warranty runs out.old guy wrote:
RV manufacturing is not rocket science. and in saying that I would stay away from entry level rv's. they are the worst investment in rv's. wood frames and poor quality. you will spend more time working on them then enjoying them. bite the bullet and get a better quality rv with a metal frame. they don't shake apart when going down the road
Sep-16-2018 05:24 AM
atreis wrote:Yes they are...about as good as anything or anybody else. I know someone who had a 2013 Lance. Shortly after the warranty expired while filling the water tank with the gravity fill, the hose on the inside of the fill port popped off. By the time he noticed the water pouring fron bottom of the closed entry door and then the perimeter below the skirting, he had pumped about 50 gallons into the trailer. It seems Lance had sort of forgot to install a hose clamp on that line and it held through numerous trips. Lance told him to take a hike, and so did his insurance as they claimed a manufacturer defect, eventually they paid however no where close to the amount he had in the thing.IAJack wrote:
This is not a TV adertisement, I am in the IT Tech field and the TV is just an example that I could think of. I really have my eye on a Lance trailer but I am going to have to sell some blooed and get a second job or find a good deal on a used one to be able to afford it.
Lance are good.
Sep-16-2018 05:00 AM
old guy wrote:
RV manufacturing is not rocket science. and in saying that I would stay away from entry level rv's. they are the worst investment in rv's. wood frames and poor quality. you will spend more time working on them then enjoying them. bite the bullet and get a better quality rv with a metal frame. they don't shake apart when going down the road
Sep-15-2018 07:01 PM
Sep-15-2018 01:26 PM
Sep-15-2018 09:41 AM
IAJack wrote:
This is not a TV adertisement, I am in the IT Tech field and the TV is just an example that I could think of. I really have my eye on a Lance trailer but I am going to have to sell some blooed and get a second job or find a good deal on a used one to be able to afford it.
Sep-15-2018 09:31 AM
Sep-14-2018 04:55 PM
Sep-14-2018 04:33 PM
troubledwaters wrote:ppine wrote:Starting at about $30,000.00 and Up, I don't think that qualifies as "And Cheaper".
Outdoors RV made in Oregon.
Sep-14-2018 12:29 PM
Sep-14-2018 05:06 AM
Sep-14-2018 03:40 AM
IAJack wrote:Jay Coe wrote:IAJack wrote:
I was just wondering if there was a brand that people often overlooked that maybe stands out as a bargain. An example the other way would be APPLE PRODUCTS being waaaay over priced for what they actually are. (and no this is not and ad for Android LOL)
😉
LOL yes, that is a more better example