โMay-17-2016 04:43 PM
โJun-07-2016 07:20 PM
bbaley wrote:rbpru wrote:
When it comes to TT construction vs. our good old home sweet homes, there are several things to consider.
Ask your self this, how long did you live in your house before you had to make the first repair? Was your house built in one day for every 120 sq./ft. or did it take months to build? Was it built by semi-skilled labor who were paid by the home? Did they purchase the cheapest appliances designed for the market or did you pick what you wanted or supply them yourself? And finally how fast have you driven you home down the road?
If you want "home construction" you are not going to find it in the RV world. About the closest I have seen are the "Tiny Homes" market. It is out there if you have the money.
Yes, yes. I keep seeing this argument.
However,
$40,0000 is $40,000.
If you bought a car, which at the time you bought it it was too new to find any bad reviews, and it "appeared" to be ok, then within the first year you had encountered the list of problems I listed,
would you still be making the same argument ?
And yes, the auto and RV industries are different.
In fact the way they are different would suggest they should be BETTER than cars.
Why ?
Because the auto industry has to spend BILLIONS of dollars on design and safety.
The RV industry is working with the same old thing with minor changes and improvements if any, and almost NONE of the billions of research, design and safety expenditure.
So that alone should offset the difference in manufacturing quantity vs. price. Lets not forget also the billions of $$$ in automation equipment used in the auto industry that is not in the RV world.
I don't know what the margin on an RV is for the mfg but obviously it is either too low to pay for good labor and design and materials, or too much is being pocketed and not enough re-invested.
I understand ALL the arguments put forward. None sufficiently account for my view that the (low) quality of these units is without parallel in other products in the same price range.
It is starting to sound like the answer is a resounding, no. sorry. The state of this industry will not support any quality because of (us) the customer not being willing to pay for it.= and willing to put up with junk.
Sad.
โJun-06-2016 06:52 AM
โJun-05-2016 02:44 PM
โMay-31-2016 03:37 AM
gypsmjim wrote:
We were the best in the industry because that's what Management wanted. Second to none. Then ISO **** beame the norm. Now we only meet the minimum standards, but we have that beautiful logo to add to the product.
If only the consumer public knew the whole story....
46 years in manufacturing...
โMay-25-2016 06:33 PM
โMay-25-2016 03:25 PM
โMay-25-2016 02:18 PM
โMay-24-2016 05:43 PM
โMay-24-2016 05:28 PM
Jackfate wrote:cruz-in wrote:
there seems to be a lot of variance trailer to trailer within each manufacturer...which is a sign of poor quality control...We have an Evergreen Toyhauler...very heavily built...we spent over 8 months in it with very few issues...However, we have chatted with others who have had all sorts of problems with Evergreen...
I suspect the same can be said for most trailer manufacturers...Until one becomes ISO 9000 certified....they will not have repeatable quality.
ISO 9000 does not equal quality. We've been ISO for many years . We made better stuff before ISO
42 yrs in manufacturing
โMay-24-2016 11:04 AM
cruz-in wrote:
there seems to be a lot of variance trailer to trailer within each manufacturer...which is a sign of poor quality control...We have an Evergreen Toyhauler...very heavily built...we spent over 8 months in it with very few issues...However, we have chatted with others who have had all sorts of problems with Evergreen...
I suspect the same can be said for most trailer manufacturers...Until one becomes ISO 9000 certified....they will not have repeatable quality.
โMay-24-2016 09:40 AM
โMay-24-2016 08:57 AM
Yeah but I'm a consumer first and if this country can't/wont keep up so be it.
โMay-24-2016 07:53 AM
โMay-24-2016 07:03 AM
Because the auto industry has to spend BILLIONS of dollars on design and safety.