โAug-15-2015 09:49 AM
โAug-18-2015 12:01 PM
beemerphile1 wrote:A fiberglass trailer has never had the fasteners come loose and cause the siding to sag, flap and leak.
The has never been an aluminum sided trailer that delaminated from a water leak.
โAug-18-2015 10:35 AM
โAug-18-2015 08:47 AM
โAug-18-2015 03:37 AM
Mike Up wrote:
That was at the factory repair facility. They actually do preventive maintenance and standard repair, out of warrant, as well as warranty repairs.
So I'd say they were pretty competent.
.
โAug-17-2015 03:48 PM
Bumpyroad wrote:Mike Up wrote:
The same can't be said about laminated. I talked to a repairman replacing a whole wall of a laminated trailer because the owner cracked the wall. No it couldn't be fixed right and the wall itself was $4000 and the labor was another $4000 for a grand total of $8000!! Just for a 6" crack (all the way through front skin and backer) in the wall. .
a totally incompetent repair man IMHO. I certainly would believe that HE couldn't fix it right but any 6 inch crack in fiberglass can be mended to look like new. Had a friend who in the middle of the night ran his boat wide open onto a rock jetty on Lake Anna. tore it up, fixed up as good as new. don't listen to all the baloney in this thread.
bumpy
โAug-16-2015 02:38 PM
โAug-16-2015 02:31 PM
time_traveler wrote:
Any insight on the Forest River EVO 2360 looking to how it with a 2015 Tundra. Max tow rating 9800 trailer is 5300 unloaded
โAug-16-2015 01:22 PM
โAug-16-2015 01:09 PM
โAug-16-2015 10:34 AM
Mike Up wrote:
The same can't be said about laminated. I talked to a repairman replacing a whole wall of a laminated trailer because the owner cracked the wall. No it couldn't be fixed right and the wall itself was $4000 and the labor was another $4000 for a grand total of $8000!! Just for a 6" crack (all the way through front skin and backer) in the wall. .
โAug-16-2015 09:42 AM
Mickey_D wrote:
We are in Central Texas and get a LOT of hail (State Farm has replaced our 40 year hail resistant roof three times in the last 14 years). Our insurance agent said don't get a tin trailer here because it will just get whooped unless you keep it under something all the time. He said to get a glass one because they hold up a lot better in hail, and if they do get damaged very badly, they total them out and you go get a new one (as well as your home roof).
I have seen several trailers around here that have so many dents from hail that they just look sad, including an airstream that looked like a giant silver golf ball...
โAug-16-2015 06:52 AM
โAug-16-2015 04:21 AM
โAug-16-2015 03:35 AM