โAug-02-2020 11:07 AM
โAug-09-2020 12:16 AM
โAug-08-2020 07:51 PM
โAug-07-2020 03:56 AM
Mike Up wrote:
Also negatives being that many makers use hollow core aluminum tubing where cabinet can fall off the wall because the screws don't have good anchors. Some have used wood core aluminum tubing to keep that from happening.
โAug-07-2020 02:32 AM
โAug-06-2020 09:02 PM
โAug-06-2020 06:08 PM
PAThwacker wrote:
I told you about poor quality forest river popups. I had the 2010 new 625d , 2007 Jay Series 1206 and bought an auction buy 2007 Jayco select 12HW for $750 bid. I wouldnโt buy any travel trailer again.
โAug-06-2020 05:55 PM
โAug-06-2020 05:22 PM
colliehauler wrote:Mike Up wrote:The box of the trailer was structural with foam and luan for the floor walls roof and a very light frame because of this. When putting on WD bars I actually bent the frame a little. The tires were under size for the weight. The floors were spongy from lack of support. All the interior curtain trim was stapled on with a hundreds of office staples and would fall off. The bathroom door didnโt fit. The slide out was installed crooked. The cut the vinyl flooring. Some of the interior lights weren't wired up. The radio didn't work.colliehauler wrote:
The Gulfstream was a Streamlite and I traded it on a Forest River Cherokee TH. Both were fiberglass not aluminum. There are 3 Gulfstream dealers in KS now. The dealer I bought from went out of business, the dealer I traded mine into use to carry Gulfstream but dropped them. Hopefully they have improved their quality. This has been many years ago so information might not be revalent to current quality. Ironically I owned a Gulfstream Seahawk that was very well built before I bought the new ultralight.
Yeh, my coworker just bought a Cherokee 274DBH which is a really nice trailer for cheaper, under $20K.
BUT I would have a hard time buying Forest River after the continuing issues I have which are all build quality problems of the camper and appliance installation problems which are not the fault of the supplier.
I was looking at Streamlite which is sold as clones under different names for the retailer area. Any serious issues with yours?
I don't think there is much difference between any RV built in Elkhart Indian. There work force is all out of the same pool of people by the same type of management that let workers go home when there quota is achieved. There is absolutely no incentive what so ever to build quality.
โAug-06-2020 01:58 AM
Mike Up wrote:Lynnmor wrote:
You live in a salt state and most trailers are built there as well. If your trailer was delivered while the roads had salt or you towed during winter, all bets are off. I don't care what brand or type of construction, the salt will get in there and sooner or later the damage will become obvious. Never buy a trailer that was exposed to road salt.
I'm not buying that. I know plenty of people that hunt in the winter and use their travel trailers. No one has ever had damage caused by salt.
Don't let those Southerners cloud your mind. ๐
โAug-05-2020 09:22 PM
โAug-05-2020 07:58 PM
mbopp wrote:
My brother had an aluminum sided trailer that the siding developed corrosion perforations.
No sure, but I heard the Grand Design Transcend line of trailers use a plastic siding instead of aluminum.
โAug-05-2020 07:53 PM
wing_zealot wrote:Mike Up wrote:Why didn't you just buy the Gulfstream then? What brought you to these boards if your dealer, who's been in business for 20 years and values repeat business, told you the Gulfstream was best? You asked for recommendations then you dismiss them out of hand. Go Figure!
Which trailers did you have from each. The dealer put Jayco and Amerilite (Gulf Stream) higher in relibility and better overall units than his other stock of travel trailers from Dutchman and Forest River.
Surprising you had the opposite experience since the Jayco and Amerilite trailers were my dealers cheapest stock but he values a repeat customer as he's been there at least 20 years I know of.
Thanks and thanks for the comments.
โAug-05-2020 07:47 PM
Lynnmor wrote:
You live in a salt state and most trailers are built there as well. If your trailer was delivered while the roads had salt or you towed during winter, all bets are off. I don't care what brand or type of construction, the salt will get in there and sooner or later the damage will become obvious. Never buy a trailer that was exposed to road salt.
โAug-05-2020 07:45 PM
Drew A. wrote:
Mike Up
Can you better explain what the galvanic corrosion you experienced on the Jayco involved? Did the staples holding the aluminum panels rot out causing the aluminum panels to become detached from the trailer?
The reason I ask is that I have a 2010 Jayflight 32BHDS and do not think I have any corrosion of the aluminum siding. I am pretty meticulous with the roof and other maintenance, so I would think that I would have noticed something if it were there.
Thx