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#1
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Hello,
I'm thinking of making a small and short motorhome to tow my DG800b trailer. Can anyone share positive and negative experience in this. Today I use a 2 door Montero, which is fantastic. Tks, Thomas DG800b |
#2
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Making one is gonna take some doing, time wise. Consider buying . . .
In Class C motorhomes there are only 3 mfgs that consistently get good reviews. Big Foot, Lazy Daze, and Born Free. I have a 26' Lazy Daze (they also make a 23'). When you look in places where people don't normally look (like behind the microwave), the wiring is neatly bundled and orderly. This sort of construction quality is hardly prevalent in the RV industry, though. More often it's a cheap veneer over garbage construction. bumper "tmlkbr" wrote in message ... Hello, I'm thinking of making a small and short motorhome to tow my DG800b trailer. Can anyone share positive and negative experience in this. Today I use a 2 door Montero, which is fantastic. Tks, Thomas DG800b |
#3
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On May 13, 9:52*am, tmlkbr wrote:
Hello, I'm thinking of making a small and short motorhome to tow my DG800b trailer. *Can anyone share positive and negative experience in this. Today I use a 2 door Montero, which is fantastic. Tks, Thomas DG800b I towed my Discus with a 23' Winnebago motorhome and it was if the glider trailer was not even there. I think the motor home made the trailer behave even better than with my van. Side wind is the only time where things get interesting. You will have to drive slower than normal to keep the whole thing lined up. Weight on hitch must be around 80 to 100 lbs to keep it from swaying. Good luck TU |
#4
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Thomas,
You didn't mention which country you live in, but if it's the USA or Canada, the only motorhome I would recommend would be one built on the Mercedes/Dodge Sprinter 3500 chassis, with the 3.0 liter diesel engine. The industry has only been making motorhomes on this chassis since 2005 or 2006 so the ink is still wet on the reviews. There are several manufacturers now building on this chassis and I examined all of them closely before choosing the Winnebago View / Itasca Navion (they are the same except for color / carpet schemes). I get 12 to 17 mpg pulling my glider trailer. ~ted/2NO 2008 Winnebago View 24H |
#5
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You didn't mention which country you live in, but if it's the USA or
Canada, the only motorhome I would recommend would be one built on the Mercedes/Dodge Sprinter 3500 chassis, with the 3.0 liter diesel engine. The industry has only been making motorhomes on this chassis since 2005 or 2006 so the ink is still wet on the reviews. There are several manufacturers now building on this chassis and I examined all of them closely before choosing the Winnebago View / Itasca Navion (they are the same except for color / carpet schemes). I get 12 to 17 mpg pulling my glider trailer. It's kind of hard to "make" (as the original poster indicated) a Winnebago, but I do agree on one point. For those of us who don't want to invest nearly the cost of a new glider in a motorhome, a used Mercedes/Dodge/Freightliner tall panel van is an excellent reasonable cost base for hacking together ones own mobile headquarters. I'm waiting for the arrival of the Ford Transit Connect in the US, if it is spec'd to tow a reasonable amount, I think it will make for a fine live-aboard tow vehicle... Marc |
#6
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Sorry if this is off topic . . .
"Tuno" mentioned the Mercedes/Dodge Sprinter 3500 chassis. While the turbo diesel and mileage is very appealing, there other downsides to consider in some motorhomes with this chassis as offered by many of the manufacturers. It has a max GVWR of only 11030 lbs. This might be reasonable, but not when they load this chassis to the gills in terms of weight. Often, when the driver climbs in, the vehicle is already over gross if full water and fuel are on board. To get around problem, some RV manufacturers resort to a couple of ploys. First they try to avoid mentioning CCC (combined cargo capacity - or the weight left for cargo after adding full fuel, water, propane and "standard"150 lb bodies for each of the sleeping position). Then they consider such niceties as generator, roof air, awning etc, as dealer installed options. As such, they don't have to figure these heavy items in computing the CCC. The'll even limit fresh water capacity to maintain at least some CCC. More than a few motorhomes on the highway are over gross, with poor braking and marginal handling in emergency avoidance manuevers . . . not that they'd be all that good to begin with. As to Eric's thoughts, "I have to disagree with bumper's assertion that 'quality construction' is important these days: I think it's layout and size that are important, instead." I agree, quality doesn't seem important to many people nowadays. I think that's a shame really, and perhaps even short sighted. Why not have quality and a good floor plan and features? The alternative, shoddy workmanship and construction, quite often results in frustration when things break down, or the RV comes apart around you in a roll over accident resulting in otherwise preventable injury or worse. A well designed and built motorhome will be free of squeaks and rattles, have good weight distribution* and handling with a low CG, and a CCC reserve (as an example, my Lazy Daze "mid bath" has about 2,400 lb of CCC available for adding food, supplies and other "junk" . . . though at 10.5 mpg or so, it sure can't equal the Sprinter chassis for mileage). *There was a recent recall where one model's weight distribution overloaded the weight capacity of the front end (not a Sprinter chassis btw). Their fix? Add weights to the rear bumper. No kidding! bumper zz |
#7
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bumper: my 08 View, filled with my family of 4 and all sundries, is
all of 100 pounds over gross, gets 15 mpg in that state while pulling the glider, and goes 10,000 miles between services. At the same time it stops on a dime, does a U-turn on a regular boulevard and my crew loves to drive it. Just press the pedal and it displaces the air in front of it. Woo-hoo! ~edt/nO2 |
#8
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bumper wrote:
As to Eric's thoughts, "I have to disagree with bumper's assertion that 'quality construction' is important these days: I think it's layout and size that are important, instead." I agree, quality doesn't seem important to many people nowadays. It's not that quality construction isn't important, it's my experience and observation that even the entry-level motorhomes are built far better than they used be. Because of this, the difference in reliability and durability are much less than they used to be. It's similar to cars nowadays: even the cheap ones are much better than the good ones of 20-30 years ago. Despite it's 130,000 miles of travel all over the USA and to Alaska and Canada, glider always in tow, our motorhome is still in good to very good condition. It's definitely an "entry level" motorhome and not of the quality of the ones bumper mentioned, yet it's a good, reliable unit. How can this be? There are some reasons, of course (these apply to Class C motorhomes): 1. They all use the same chassis, whether it's Lazy Daze or an "entry level" unit; typically, the Ford "cutaway" Class C chassis, and sometimes a Chevy version. 2. They all get the major items - furnace, water heater, oven, refrigerator, air conditioner, generator - from the same manufacturers, though not necessarily the same models of appliances. The "quality" differences between models seems small to me; generally, you are just getting a bigger or fancier refrigerator, etc, not a more reliable one. 3. Most of them use the same pressure-laminated sandwich construction: fiberglass, plywood, foam board, plywood, interior covering, with a steel frame a part of the sandwich. Lazy Daze is different. 4. Consequently, the Class C units are far more alike than they are different, and they hold up about the same because of that. You can get a nicer unit in some of the features (better fabrics, a more comfortable couch, more options, etc), but not a significantly more reliable unit. I believe the change to sandwich construction (15-20 years ago) allowed a quantum leap in construction quality, making low cost, rugged construction available for even the "cheap" RVs. So, the bottom end has become much better, and the top end has become more luxurious. Anyway, that's why I think the layout and size choices are more important than "quality". For towing, I recommend picking one with a relatively long wheel base. Some Class C units have a short wheelbase and long overhang in the back, which makes them less stable with a trailer, and particularly so in the wind. The shorter wheelbase allows it to turn more tightly, which is useful when turning around, but I think it's a poor tradeoff. We probably haven't answered the OP's question very well, but let's hope he doesn't discourage easily! -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA * Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly * Updated! "Transponders in Sailplanes" http://tinyurl.com/y739x4 * New Jan '08 - sections on Mode S, TPAS, ADS-B, Flarm, more * "A Guide to Self-launching Sailplane Operation" at www.motorglider.org |
#9
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tmlkbr wrote:
Hello, I'm thinking of making a small and short motorhome to tow my DG800b trailer. Can anyone share positive and negative experience in this. Today I use a 2 door Montero, which is fantastic. Where do you wish to use this motorhome (Brazil only?), why do you want to make one instead of buying one, and how many people will be traveling in it? -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA * Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly * Updated! "Transponders in Sailplanes" http://tinyurl.com/y739x4 * New Jan '08 - sections on Mode S, TPAS, ADS-B, Flarm, more * "A Guide to Self-launching Sailplane Operation" at www.motorglider.org |
#10
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![]() "Eric Greenwell" wrote in message news:6eoWj.252$Pr1.150@trndny03... tmlkbr wrote: Hello, I'm thinking of making a small and short motorhome to tow my DG800b trailer. Can anyone share positive and negative experience in this. Today I use a 2 door Montero, which is fantastic. Where do you wish to use this motorhome (Brazil only?), why do you want to make one instead of buying one, and how many people will be traveling in it? Eric, I really like your little motorhome. It looks like the space available is used very efficiently. How many miles are on the odometer? Wayne HP-14 "Six Foxtrot" http://www.soaridaho.com/Schreder |
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