โDec-18-2016 06:56 PM
โDec-23-2016 08:14 AM
โDec-23-2016 07:44 AM
โDec-23-2016 07:40 AM
TomG2 wrote:
The Jayco 154 BH has a yellow sticker weight of 2,590 pounds, 3500 pound gvwr. Has two bunk beds and the usual dinette for sleeping three in their own bed. Dry bath with shower and tub, micro, AC, H W heater, Propane/electric refrigerator, furnace, power awning, spare tire, two year warranty, $11,995
Biggest negative is small holding tanks.
โDec-23-2016 07:35 AM
โDec-23-2016 07:35 AM
SoundGuy wrote:
....snip....the OP who stated in her original post that whatever camper she buys has to have a bed for each of the 3 of them. :h It's also WAY too heavy for her Pathfinder.
gmw photos wrote:
Which is pretty much the theme of the whole thread as it has evolved: a camper with individual beds for each of them.... is going to be too heavy for her Pathfinder.
โDec-23-2016 06:48 AM
โDec-23-2016 06:19 AM
SoundGuy wrote:
....snip....
the OP who stated in her original post that whatever camper she buys has to have a bed for each of the 3 of them. :h It's also WAY too heavy for her Pathfinder.
โDec-23-2016 04:41 AM
FlexCamper wrote:
In July we bought a Pacific Coachworks 18RBS.
โDec-23-2016 04:31 AM
Atlee wrote:A window A/C was not designed for a RV. They use them because they are cheap. Most (that work) have a hole cut in the roof with a frig type vent cover to draw air in for the cooling of the outside condenser. Some people have had issues with the water that accumulates at the bottom of the A/C window unit. When they drive it sloshes out into the interior. They were not designed to be used for RV'S.
Why do you think a through-wall AC is more of a place waiting for a leak to happen than a similar roof mounted A/C which also has a hole in the roof?
I figure a hole is a hole is a hole.trail-explorer wrote:
My preference, get one with a roof A/C instead of one with a household, through-wall A/C.
The through-wall A/C seems like a place waiting fore a leak to happen.
โDec-22-2016 09:52 PM
โDec-22-2016 01:17 AM
trail-explorer wrote:
My preference, get one with a roof A/C instead of one with a household, through-wall A/C.
The through-wall A/C seems like a place waiting fore a leak to happen.
โDec-21-2016 08:37 PM
โDec-21-2016 07:50 PM
Seashellmama wrote:
Looking to get my first trailer. I have two kids, and none of us want to share a bed so it needs to have three separate sleeping places. I am super lazy, so would prefer those sleeping places be permanent-beds, because I know that once turned into a bed at a campground, that is how it will stay until we get home. I've got a 5000lb tow capacity (2014 Nissan Pathfinder 4WD), so don't want to go much over 3500lb GVWR. I realize that most people want a larger trailer after a while, but given that my kids will grow up and likely stop camping with me, I'm more likely to downsize in the future.
It seems like there are a few models with very similar floor plans, bunk beds and a queen... Jayco (174bh... previously 184bh?), Coachmen Clipper 17bh, Coachmen Apex Nano 185bh, a couple of others, too (I found one with a slideout, but still sub-3500lbs gross, but now I can't find it) then maybe a Forest River RP-172 and I don't know what else to consider.
I'm such a newbie I can barely differentiate any of these. I want to keep it around the $15k range, and I know I'll need to get things that don't come with them, like sway bars, weight distribution hitch, bits and whatnot that I didn't know I needed, other things I'll think I need that are totally useless, etc etc.
I'm open to all sorts of advice (though telling me I need a bigger and better tow vehicle has to fall on deaf ears, because reality; telling me I have to get a pop-up will make me cry). My current obsession is about how to choose among the available options, and whether any are a particularly poor choice.
โDec-21-2016 05:14 PM
โDec-21-2016 03:49 PM