Jump to content

Corrie473

Validated Members
  • Posts

    19
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Recent Profile Visitors

The recent visitors block is disabled and is not being shown to other users.

Corrie473's Achievements

Newbie

Newbie (1/14)

  1. Oh... interesting point. I was wondering about RVing during this craziness. I was thinking I had dodged that bullet and assuming that by the time I get on the road it'll be mostly back to normal... can't count on it though and you're right that is a big consideration.
  2. I know you're probably right from a rational perspective... even on our trip last summer/fall (we were in Arizona and southern Utah during the fall so not so cold) it got old making middle-of-the-night trips... I usually had to pee some time in the middle of the night, usually when my daughter was sound asleep, but I could not chance leaving her in the tent and walking to the bath house alone... so I would either try to wait until she woke up or have to wake her up to bring her with me which I'm sure she didn't appreciate. I know in terms of bacteria per square inch you're probably right, the bath house is worse. It's an out of sight out of mind issue - I just walk in there, it looks clean, I flush when I'm done and the waste 'goes away'... Maybe it's not so bad once you get used to it but it just turned my stomach to watch that process...
  3. I see what you're saying and I did watch a very informative video about the pros and cons of RPods but then there is so much junk to wade through on YouTube to find one good video. I've found this with every topic, not just RV life. The one you linked was very good, I don't know how many videos you sifted through to find that but thank you. I will check out this one too.
  4. Whoa. Just watched the video. It is a very good video, very thorough and informative... and my reaction was NO, I can't do this. I'm sure I sound lily-livered. I actually don't have a problem digging the cathole when camping and I have cleaned toilets in hostels while traveling overseas, so it's not as if I've never been around poop... not sure why this turned my stomach SO badly but ulgh... the black garbage bag she keeps it in... you know that just rinsing the hose off doesn't really clean it, you'd need bleach or possibly leaving it out in high-altitude sunlight... and then you could see that some of it was leaking the entire time she was flushing it... just gross. I'm going back to my original thought that we will just use the showers and toilets at the campground! Thank you for the reality check. BTW why does she say that some people don't want a Class C for this reason? A Class A works exactly the same way in terms of grey and black water tanks, right? What is she contrasting it to?
  5. Yeah the cassette toilet sounded a little,uh, icky... salesguy claimed it would be no big deal and can just throw it in a dumpster when you're done with it "but I didn't say that." I did really like the layout of the ALiner... it was one of the larger models. I do a lot of creative writing so I would like a nice seating area with a large stable table surface, not a flimsy swiveling tray that you can just rest your plate on (like I saw in one of the T@B trailer). The ALiner had that. It also felt surprisingly roomy, probably because the A-shape gives you a high ceiling in the center. But... in addition to the cassette toilet issue, yes the set-up was another thing I was worried about. My friend in New Mexico said this: Imagine you just want to pull off the road and take a nap (which I like to do, but it didn't happen much with Lena because we need to sync our sleepy times, but anyway...) You have to set up the ALiner, which takes 20 minutes. By that time you're not sleepy anymore. What a hassle! I couldn't really argue with that... on the other hand, they are very appealing in their layout...
  6. Okay, yes, that's true also... I remember when the engine crapped out in 2017 on a long extended trip, I was in a small town in the UP and had to make a quick decision about whether to put in a new engine or junk the truck and shop for something else. A friend advised me to put the new engine in saying something to the effect that 'it'll be like a brand new truck, and you can't get a brand new truck for $3500'... yeah... except that it didn't really turn out that way. All the other components are still those of a 24 year old truck. I do love the truck, it's a stick shift so it's fun to drive, it handles great, it looks great, it's solid, it's comfortable... but I hear you, it has its limitations. When you say a Casita or a Scamp I assume you would also consider a 15' A-Liner or R-Pod?
  7. Hi guys, Yeah, I'm in New England, which I feel (but have no evidence) is a really bad place to be looking for an RV, reasons being (a) lack of public land in this area means people don't really understand the RV lifestyle, most people are doing the 'take it to the lake for the weekend' routine that someone else mentioned, so they can't really conceptualize what you'll be needing. I think that's why I got the suggestions of a pop-up, and (b) I just think prices are high here... rent is high, food is high (wages not so much, never really figured that one out). I'm not totally opposed to traveling to purchase an RV so I am looking at PPL motor homes... the other thing is that once we go full time we will have to establish our domicile in one of the "appropriate" states and it may well be Texas (I lived in Houston for 6 months at one point and it's a bad memory for personal reasons - a time in my life when I let a good opportunity pass me because of various personal weaknesses - I have not been able to even drive through Houston since then, but I have told myself I will have to get over that...) so it may be more practical to buy down there. Of course I'd have to be relatively certain that it was the right travel trailer before embarking... But in any case thanks for the tip, I am on their website now. Corrie
  8. Ok see I was wondering about that... i admit I had a bad experience with a consignment lot and buying a car...a few years back I had decided to get rid of the truck and located a vehicle on a consignment lot through Autotrader. I paid cash $4750, took it for a prepurchase inspection was told it was good, and the vehicle didn't make it 24 hours before it threw a rod. The consignment lot owner returned his commission of $475 but otherwise threw his hands up... the previous owner said the car was running perfectly when she dropped it off and I must have done something to it... I called a lawyer and was told "you signed the 'as is' paper, you're done"... sold it to a junkyard for $700, net loss around 3.5K. I went back to driving the truck. have not wanted anything to do with consignment lots since then. But. I don't know if that guy was a typical consignment lot owner. Maybe just a really bad apple. I have been looking on RVtrader a little trepidatiously...
  9. Yes I'm starting to agree that 10K won't buy a lot of trailer especially if you add the condition that it must be lightweight. I could move the budget up to 12K without too much angst, but 15K starts to make me uncomfortable... But as far as I've seen the Class B and A are starting at a higher price point. A fixer upper is not really an option for me, I'm not handy and I have absolutely no one that I can enlist to help me on this project- and I mean NO ONE.
  10. Yes I realized after I posted that that it's not a contradiction to set a weight limit for each axle independently and then a different limit for the two as a system.... there are all multiple constraints on the system in other words. Also I'm glad you mentioned that you don't want to regularly stress it to the max because I am probably that guy that would have said "oh I'm at one pound under? I'm good"...
  11. True they seemed realistic about what the truck could tow. They did both mention a pop-up to which I said I just don't think so... how much climate control can you really have in a pop up? The sales guy at the first dealership said, "well it's a lot better than a tent"... uh, yeah, but that's not saying much. Correct me if I'm wrong, I don't see a pop-up being suitable for full timing? And as far as the kitchen/ stove, what I was thinking was that in general it seems if you want a full bath instead of a wet bath you have to upgrade to a more "luxurious" unit in all aspects. I didn't see any units that had a sparse/ rudimentary kitchen and a full bath, while I saw several that had a pretty nice kitchen and a rudimentary bathroom. For someone like me that's unfortunate because if in order to get a full bath I have to take a nice kitchen as part of the package its really a waste, I will not use it! It's just adding to the footprint and the weight.
  12. Yeah I don't want to sound squeamish but the wet baths I saw kind of gave me the willies. She is used now used to a bath, though on our trip we only took showers, so I guessed she would get used to that again, but I didn't really like the look of the wet baths. I would gladly trade a kitchen for a tub/shower because I don't cook very much (that doesn't mean I don't try to eat healthy, don't worry I'm not feeding my daughter a steady diet of cheerios or canned pasta... but I would have no complaints about just continuing to use my single burner campstove)... but I don't think that's an option.
  13. Okay I always assumed that was 'truckers only' and that a private vehicle went there. Now that I think about it I was visualizing the ones on the highway, where the trucks are instructed to stop. As someone else pointed out, general public is not welcome there. Yes a truck stop will work.
  14. Oh... okay! Yes and I forgot to include the passengers (150 lbs) and the camper shell itself (no idea but didn't seem to change the way the truck handled so I was guessing relatively negligible) and yes I can believe 1500 is not very realistic, I just threw it out. But... if GVWR is the total weight that can be on the axles, then why is the sum of the GAWR front and GAWR rear not equal to the GVWR? I guess now that I think about it they don't have to be... there can be a limit on each individual axle and a different limit for the total and all three have to be respected. Ok that makes sense. Thank you!
  15. Hi all Just wanted to update about my visits to 2 local dealerships. The first one I went to was the one with the A-LIner for 8.5 K. It was sort of what I expected: very small reception area, a 'can I help you' immediately, shepherded out to see the A-Liner which was parked in the back. It was VERY small, I think the smallest of all the A-Liner models. The salesman said 'it's not the type of thing we usually take in'. He also had another travel trailer they had just taken in that was still being cleaned. It had ample space but I just didn't like the layout, the bunk beds seemed really claustraphobic, and I couldn't imagine us in it. The salesman said 'that's all I got that your truck could tow for under 10K.' I said what if I upped the budget to 15K his response was 'yeah that would open up some options, here's my card, go on the website, call me if you see something you like' - seemed eager to get rid of me. So we went over to a second dealership. They didn't have anything (the only thing below 20K that they had they said was too heavy for my truck to tow) but they apparently leave all their units unlocked during business hours and let people walk through them. So we were able to walk through some T@B travel trailers, a 'Camp Rover', a Forest River can't remember the model, and some brands I haven't heard of. There was also another A-Liner, a larger one with a 'cassette toilet' which sounds like a chemical toilet to me and a pretty generous space and I liked the layout but no shower. The salesman said it will be a waiting game when it comes to finding something the truck can tow that's in my price range. Anyway it was an interesting experience, feel like I learned a lot... this is more like renting an apartment than buying a vehicle. Somehow I thought that if the specs were right (price, weight, etc) it would be 'the right' TT for me. Now I realize it's a lot more subjective... it has to 'feel right' when you walk in. I sort of set a goal of being ready to go in 2 months, figured that will give the Coronavirus stuff time to die down and more states to reopen, also I have a personal commitment in June in the state where I'm living though it could be weaseled out of I'd rather not, so I figured we would not depart until after that... so I guess I have time to wait for the right trailer to cross my path... Thanks again to everyone for their encouragement
×
×
  • Create New...