.

New RVs are a PITA. 

I've had a few, and every one ends up with a 10+ item "punch list" within the first few months. 

This time around I rolled the dice without an extended warranty, and here is why... working with RV repair is a giant effin' PITA, even with the factory warranty it takes weeks to months for simple fixes... yes they are "free" but at what cost?  Missed trips, headaches dealing with shitty dealer service writers, damage inflicted while at the dealership and your coach sitting out in the weather when it has a garage at home all have their own costs.  I've found I can get most/all issues fixed in 1-2 days by mobile RV mechanics that would normally mean the coach sitting at a dealer for weeks if not months.  I've actually had some success taking my invoices from mobile repair and getting the OEM or extended warranty to refund me. 

Also, with this coach I hope repairs are going to be cheaper to fix in general, yet the extended warranty costs were pretty close to my last coach.  The last coach was a '19 Mountain Aire on a Spartan Chassis (with Silverleaf) and a 11.9 ISX/Allison 4k.  If a motor had went on the MA it's something like $30-40k for a new one.  This coach is just on a GM/International 6500 chassis with a 6.6L Duramax and an Allison 1750.  If this motor goes, it's something like $10k.  If Silverleaf had big issues who knows how much that could be, vs. plain old (poorly done) traditional wiring in this one.  The MA it had a giant full wall slide that housed the kitchen, bedroom cabinets/tv, recliners, dinette, lots of upper cabinets and was all real porcelain tile and solid hardwood cabinets etc.  It was so heavy the slide mechanism was hydraulic.  If something happened and that slide had to be removed for repairs it'd be a zillion dollars.  This coach also has a FWS, but it's a good 10' shorter (as is the whole coach) and while it houses basically the same stuff, it's "toy hauler quality" construction and way, way lighter utilizing a traditional slide mechanism.  

With warranties being around $10k for either coach, and this new chassis carrying a good powertrain warranty it just didn't add up. I've fixed prob 4-5 things myself and brought in an RV mechanic for a handful more (as well as having them swap from the shitty RV fridge to a Resi).  I've still spent a tiny fraction of the warranty cost and never had to send the RV anywhere.

-TJ

 
I seemed to have fixed my generator issue.  I crawled around underneath it yesterday and found the fuel feed and return lines were only half on and the clamps were above the nipple.  While there were no leaks, I'm sure it was either collapsing/restricting the line internally and/or creating just enough of a pocket to suck air when running.  I replaced the cheap band clamps and put better hose clamps on it.  It does seem to run much better.

Here's to "hoping".

Again, appreciate all the constructive inputs and advice.  I'm sure more issues will come up as I continue to shake things down.
I might have missed it, but what did you end up getting?  One of the problems I had to find/fix was also a generator issue, but a very different one.  The first month I owned it I took the RV over to a buddy's house in Henderson (next town over from me in Vegas).  It was late-summer so it was H-O-T, so I turned the genny and both ACs on before leaving the house.  When I got to his place ~20min later the genny was off.  It turns out the main DC power lugs on the gen were super loose... in fact one nut (I forget which side +/-) was just gone.  It was a giant pain to get to them since they were in the back corner of the genny chassis, but once I replaced the one and tightened the other, it was fine.  I also had to completely reroute the fuel fill and vents for both tanks, fix various trim, fix shower tub seal, etc. etc. etc. 

-TJ

 
We got a 2023 Entegra Accolade XT.  It's a 4x4 and all the goodies.  Diesel, diesel generator.

Crawling under it...just made me want to reroute everything "correctly"... :lol:   Now I have that on my soul until I do it.

All in all, we love this RV and if fits us perfect.  I was just "hoping" for no issues...silly me.
Not all that different than what I went with ('23 Nexus Rebel 30R - it's on the International/GM 6500 4x4 chassis).  The new breed of Super Cs are Super Rad... but yeah all the plumbing/wiring/fit and finish reminds me of a toy hauler more than my previous higher-end diesel pushers. 

-TJ
 

 
Last edited by a moderator:
Back
Top