โSep-14-2018 12:37 PM
โNov-27-2018 10:43 AM
โNov-25-2018 01:48 PM
โNov-25-2018 01:44 PM
proxim2020 wrote:yr2017 wrote:
They were. Some were built as ambulances on 3500 frames - like ours.
I don't know about that. I've only ever known Chrysler to produce two SRT-10 models, DR1S41 (Quad) and DR1S61 (Reg). Both were built within the DR family which was on the 1500 platform. I've never heard of one being built on the D1 (3500) or DC (Chassis Cab) platforms. There's no 3500 SRT-10 listed in the Body Builder Guide for those years. If you know how the model codes work, a 3500 SRT-10 would be model D13S41, a model that was never made.
โNov-25-2018 01:39 PM
westernrvparkowner wrote:yr2017 wrote:Since you had to research Campgrounds carefully to be sure you would be accepted is a clear signal we are not alone in not allowing them. Curiosity compels me to ask why you would have a custom built horse trailer with living quarters if never use it for a horse. I sure hope it isn't a case of parsing the English language when you say it has never seen a horse because it is constantly full of Mules, Llamas, Ostriches, Camels or Unicorns. Unfortunately, your situation sounds like one where your good business is going to fall into the cracks of our rules. You can't win them all, with few exceptions.westernrvparkowner wrote:
additional vehicles etc.)Don't understand your post. The Renegade is a professionally built Super C. It isn't a horse trailer, it isn't a homebuilt schoolie conversion. If the same company builds horse trailers, so what? Many companies build both recreational vehicles and other items. Coleman campers are made by the same company that makes Rubbermaid. We allow people to camp in Coleman Campers but would never allow someone to camp in a Rubbermaid Trash can. In the case of Renegade we allow the Super Cs and not the horse trailers.
As an FYI, the horse trailer rule came about from experience. When we were young, we allowed one and it came in complete with horses. We don't have equine facilities and we got an earful of how if we allow horse trailers then should have pastures. OK, lesson learned, ask about horses.
Very next horse trailer we asked, told no problem, no horses. Trouble was, trailer was full of horse deposits that stank to high heaven which was only appreciated by the 1,000,000 flies that traveled with them. "Neigh"bors (pun intended) quickly complained to both the trailer owner and then the office. Unfortunately, they complained to the owners before the office, so the owners took it upon themselves to clean said trailer by washing the horse apples, horse hair, and horse bedding straw out of the trailer and onto the site lawn. At this time I realized I had violated one of my core operating values: never get bitten by the same dog twice. So now, no horse trailers, ever.
My Renegade was custom built as a combination horse trailer and LQ. I was never denied access to any campground because I had horses. I researched my cg's carefully to make sure they would accept them. Some horse trailer owners are slobs - no question about it. My Sundowner never saw a horse - it was custom made for us - triple axle - strictly living quarters. I pulled it with a Mack COE.
โNov-13-2018 02:24 PM
yr2017 wrote:
They were. Some were built as ambulances on 3500 frames - like ours.
โNov-12-2018 06:59 PM
jerem0621 wrote:
Camping in a trailerable houseboat?
โNov-12-2018 01:42 PM
yr2017 wrote:Since you had to research Campgrounds carefully to be sure you would be accepted is a clear signal we are not alone in not allowing them. Curiosity compels me to ask why you would have a custom built horse trailer with living quarters if never use it for a horse. I sure hope it isn't a case of parsing the English language when you say it has never seen a horse because it is constantly full of Mules, Llamas, Ostriches, Camels or Unicorns. Unfortunately, your situation sounds like one where your good business is going to fall into the cracks of our rules. You can't win them all, with few exceptions.westernrvparkowner wrote:
additional vehicles etc.)Don't understand your post. The Renegade is a professionally built Super C. It isn't a horse trailer, it isn't a homebuilt schoolie conversion. If the same company builds horse trailers, so what? Many companies build both recreational vehicles and other items. Coleman campers are made by the same company that makes Rubbermaid. We allow people to camp in Coleman Campers but would never allow someone to camp in a Rubbermaid Trash can. In the case of Renegade we allow the Super Cs and not the horse trailers.
As an FYI, the horse trailer rule came about from experience. When we were young, we allowed one and it came in complete with horses. We don't have equine facilities and we got an earful of how if we allow horse trailers then should have pastures. OK, lesson learned, ask about horses.
Very next horse trailer we asked, told no problem, no horses. Trouble was, trailer was full of horse deposits that stank to high heaven which was only appreciated by the 1,000,000 flies that traveled with them. "Neigh"bors (pun intended) quickly complained to both the trailer owner and then the office. Unfortunately, they complained to the owners before the office, so the owners took it upon themselves to clean said trailer by washing the horse apples, horse hair, and horse bedding straw out of the trailer and onto the site lawn. At this time I realized I had violated one of my core operating values: never get bitten by the same dog twice. So now, no horse trailers, ever.
My Renegade was custom built as a combination horse trailer and LQ. I was never denied access to any campground because I had horses. I researched my cg's carefully to make sure they would accept them. Some horse trailer owners are slobs - no question about it. My Sundowner never saw a horse - it was custom made for us - triple axle - strictly living quarters. I pulled it with a Mack COE.
โNov-12-2018 01:16 PM
proxim2020 wrote:yr2017 wrote:
Nothing is stock. Not the 48RE tranny, but an Allison.
I was thinking more like the frame. Aren't they built on a 1500 chassis?
โNov-12-2018 01:14 PM
westernrvparkowner wrote:
additional vehicles etc.)Don't understand your post. The Renegade is a professionally built Super C. It isn't a horse trailer, it isn't a homebuilt schoolie conversion. If the same company builds horse trailers, so what? Many companies build both recreational vehicles and other items. Coleman campers are made by the same company that makes Rubbermaid. We allow people to camp in Coleman Campers but would never allow someone to camp in a Rubbermaid Trash can. In the case of Renegade we allow the Super Cs and not the horse trailers.
As an FYI, the horse trailer rule came about from experience. When we were young, we allowed one and it came in complete with horses. We don't have equine facilities and we got an earful of how if we allow horse trailers then should have pastures. OK, lesson learned, ask about horses.
Very next horse trailer we asked, told no problem, no horses. Trouble was, trailer was full of horse deposits that stank to high heaven which was only appreciated by the 1,000,000 flies that traveled with them. "Neigh"bors (pun intended) quickly complained to both the trailer owner and then the office. Unfortunately, they complained to the owners before the office, so the owners took it upon themselves to clean said trailer by washing the horse apples, horse hair, and horse bedding straw out of the trailer and onto the site lawn. At this time I realized I had violated one of my core operating values: never get bitten by the same dog twice. So now, no horse trailers, ever.
โNov-06-2018 08:04 AM
westernrvparkowner wrote:
When we were young, we allowed one and it came in complete with horses. We don't have equine facilities and we got an earful of how if we allow horse trailers then should have pastures. OK, lesson learned, ask about horses.
Very next horse trailer we asked, told no problem, no horses. Trouble was, trailer was full of horse deposits that stank to high heaven which was only appreciated by the 1,000,000 flies that traveled with them. "Neigh"bors (pun intended) quickly complained to both the trailer owner and then the office. Unfortunately, they complained to the owners before the office, so the owners took it upon themselves to clean said trailer by washing the horse apples, horse hair, and horse bedding straw out of the trailer and onto the site lawn. At this time I realized I had violated one of my core operating values: never get bitten by the same dog twice. So now, no horse trailers, ever.
โNov-06-2018 06:17 AM
yr2017 wrote:Don't understand your post. The Renegade is a professionally built Super C. It isn't a horse trailer, it isn't a homebuilt schoolie conversion. If the same company builds horse trailers, so what? Many companies build both recreational vehicles and other items. Coleman campers are made by the same company that makes Rubbermaid. We allow people to camp in Coleman Campers but would never allow someone to camp in a Rubbermaid Trash can. In the case of Renegade we allow the Super Cs and not the horse trailers.westernrvparkowner wrote:yr2017 wrote:If the Bluebird was a Wanderlodge RV, not a school bus and isn't shedding parts as it drives the roads, almost assuredly not a problem. We do not allow horse trailers, Sundowner LQ or not.westernrvparkowner wrote:
My parks are RVs only. Know many other park owners who operate the same way. We don't allow schoolies or homebuilts and we don't allow semis even though they have sleepers. A boat being used as an RV is something else that would not be allowed.
So, I'm guessing my old vintage Bluebird or my Sundowner LQ horse trailers wouldn't be allowed? I've seen a few in the KOA's in MT - so I'm guessing you don't own one of those campgrounds.
Somewhere close to 90 percent of our guests make reservations prior to arrival. Part of the reservation process is obtaining information regarding the RV (type, size, make and model, year, tow vehicle, additional vehicles etc.). If we don't recognize the make and model, we look it up. If it turns out to be something other than a professionally manufactured RV we stop the reservation at that point. Nobody thinks they have a place to stay and are surprised at the last minute that they are being turned away.
Those schoolbuses you so dislike are built by the same people that built the Wanderlodge - Blue Bird in Ft Valley, GA.
My newer Sundowner cost more than the Wanderlodge and the two schoolbusses I converted to LQ's.
I just delivered the last rv we owned, from MT to the new owner in AK. A brand new one costs over $350k - but you wouldn't allow it either. www.renegaderv.com/renegade-xl-high-end-motorhomes-2019 The XL45QB
So I guess you'll have to keep turning them away - the KOA's will gladly take them.
โNov-06-2018 05:51 AM
yr2017 wrote:
Nothing is stock. Not the 48RE tranny, but an Allison.
โNov-06-2018 05:26 AM
โNov-06-2018 05:17 AM
westernrvparkowner wrote:yr2017 wrote:If the Bluebird was a Wanderlodge RV, not a school bus and isn't shedding parts as it drives the roads, almost assuredly not a problem. We do not allow horse trailers, Sundowner LQ or not.westernrvparkowner wrote:
My parks are RVs only. Know many other park owners who operate the same way. We don't allow schoolies or homebuilts and we don't allow semis even though they have sleepers. A boat being used as an RV is something else that would not be allowed.
So, I'm guessing my old vintage Bluebird or my Sundowner LQ horse trailers wouldn't be allowed? I've seen a few in the KOA's in MT - so I'm guessing you don't own one of those campgrounds.
Somewhere close to 90 percent of our guests make reservations prior to arrival. Part of the reservation process is obtaining information regarding the RV (type, size, make and model, year, tow vehicle, additional vehicles etc.). If we don't recognize the make and model, we look it up. If it turns out to be something other than a professionally manufactured RV we stop the reservation at that point. Nobody thinks they have a place to stay and are surprised at the last minute that they are being turned away.