โDec-29-2014 06:22 AM
โDec-30-2014 06:28 PM
jimh425 wrote:
DiploStrat, you might want to note where RobertRyan is from. I think he knows something about what's going on in Australia. ;). Btw, I disagree that some of the items you mentioned are innovations. At least, most of us have no need for them. Our RVs work pretty well.
For some of the other posters, most of the people who are hardcore rvers I know or met didn't really get going until their late 50s or 60s. If say most of the Gen Xers and Milleniels have some time to grow up or save. For now most of those are in tents.
โDec-30-2014 06:22 PM
jimh425 wrote:
DiploStrat, you might want to note where RobertRyan is from. I think he knows something about what's going on in Australia. ;). Btw, I disagree that some of the items you mentioned are innovations. At least, most of us have no need for them. Our RVs work pretty well.
โDec-30-2014 05:41 PM
โDec-30-2014 05:06 PM
โDec-30-2014 04:25 PM
RobertRyan wrote:dadwolf2 wrote:
IF, Australian or other country RV companies make a foothold with innovative construction, then the US market will change. But if these companies don't meet a competitive price point...will never happen.
They are already doing just that.
Air commander Airconditioning
Host industriess Eathcruiser
All Terrain Warriors United States
EarthCruiser in US partnership with host Industries
ARB
โDec-30-2014 04:15 PM
silversand wrote:
Steve:
....oh ya; for sure there is a back to the roots light-weight camping/trekking movement/trend among Millennials. It is really interesting to read Backpacking magazine (and other similar genre: for kayakers/paddlers); their retained review personnel is/are very very young (Millennials).
I think this is a good thing.
Unfortunately for Millennials, only a few will ever have the means to "get into" RVing (the few that do buy older vintage RVs, and literally rebuild them from the ground up, as best they can)...
โDec-30-2014 04:07 PM
โDec-30-2014 03:15 PM
dadwolf2 wrote:
IF, Australian or other country RV companies make a foothold with innovative construction, then the US market will change. But if these companies don't meet a competitive price point...will never happen.
โDec-30-2014 03:10 PM
โDec-30-2014 12:32 PM
Silversand wrote:
Robert Ryan's pointing out the enormous strides made among Australian RV/truck camper manufacturers vis composites is important (Australian RV manufacturers need to market their products World-wide by selling turn-key manufacturing "systems" and expertise, not by exporting "end product" from geographically shipping-disadvantageous Australia).
โDec-30-2014 12:10 PM
โDec-30-2014 12:04 PM
silversand wrote:Billy G wrote:
Will the computer generation want out door activities? Will we be able to afford them?
....it depends what cohort you mean. To me, the computer generation are baby boomers (who invented computing and supercomputing: pre smart-phone). This group earns roughly 40% of all US income. The Gen Xers were the cohort who invented mobile technology (ie. the first smart-phone "phone-computer mashup" was the IBM Simon in 1992, designed by people born in the '60s and '70s), Gen-Xers earning about 30% of all US income. It could be argued that Gen-Yers (Millennials) were kind of involved in the invention/marketing/apping of the super smart-phones debuting in the 2005+ era (this generation is the poorest, earning only <18% of all US income, and with a horrendous unemployment statistic at an astounding ~15% in the US)...paradoxically, Millennials are the most educated cohort among all generational cohorts, they are the poorest, most chronically unemployed, and vast numbers of them still live with their parents.
It is HIGHLY doubtful that Millennials will ever be able to afford any kind of RV lifestyle....anytime soon (read: perhaps in the future, when they inherit).
โDec-30-2014 11:55 AM
Billy G wrote:
Will the computer generation want out door activities? Will we be able to afford them?
โDec-30-2014 10:14 AM
โDec-30-2014 05:43 AM