Houston Remodeler wrote:
Its an easy repair. If it wasn't under warranty I would have done it myself in less time than it took to drag it to the repair shop.
Good for you but irrelevant as the vast majority of RV owners wouldn't take on the task of completely removing a wall to repair water damage ... and if the wall itself proves to have suffered significant damage it would have to be replaced with a brand new one at a not insignificant cost. In the OP's case there would be little point in purchasing a trailer he
knows already has suffered damage or in this particular case is known (and acknowledged by the factory) to have prematurely failed, particularly when there are so many other choices out there available. As I read the OP's original post this is exactly the type of information he's looking for. ;)