disney4dan
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- May 16, 2007
- Messages
- 1,155
Well, after 3.5 years of great times with our Jayco, we discovered a hidden section of wood rot in the roof and back wall that extends to the floor
.
I thought I had been so careful on checking all the seams, but this just goes to show you never can tell. After kicking myself around the driveway for a while, I got serious and began investigating. Looks like the damage had started before we bought the trailer, because there were signs of "quick fixes" to a leak in the roof in that general area that were done before I bought it. I only found it because we found mold just starting in the corner in the back of the top bunk. I climbed my big 'ole but up in there to clean it out and found the wood behind the wallpaper to be MUSH.
Anyhoo, after spending a few hours Saturday exploring my chances of success in ripping it apart, tempoarily resealing the roof to keep water out, I came back into the house to do more research on how to peel back the rubber roof without making it worse. DW Nancy was talking with a friend, and I could tell something fishy was up. She was not sure how to approach me on this, but was thinking of just trading it in and making the plunge!. Did I ever tell you how much I love this woman?
She said I've done enough to show I'm capable, but she did not want either of us to go through the misery of the repair ourselves and could not see sinking the $$ into having someone else do it on an 8 to 9 year old trailer.
So, we spent a few hours yesterday looking at some trailers and have sort of settled on two. There is a Jayco Jay Flight G2 with a very similar floor plan to the one we have but with a slide out to give more room (for a reasonable price) and a Keystone Passport Ultralite 30 foot bunkhouse that the whole family likes the floor plan (for $3k more). I like the quality of Jayco so far, but DW says that there are just enough differences and less storage space inside the Jayco that it would bother her because she would want it to be like our old one. The Keystone is much bigger when open and the bunk area slides out to make a small "room" where the kids could set up video games and not take up the dining area. After spending a week in the trailer in the rain, she knows how important that can be!
So, we are thinking this through, but have decided that with our love for camping and all the fun we have on multiple adventures each year, we'd rather do this now while the kids are 9, 10 and 17.
I've read mixed reviews on the Keystone Passports, but many people seem to have added that no brand is immune to potential problems, more important is how the dealer makes good on them when discovered.
Any other advice on new TT purchasing that I should know? I've heard you should have the dealer "challenge" the seals with a garden hose during initial walk through, along with checking any/all windows, plumbing, etc.

I thought I had been so careful on checking all the seams, but this just goes to show you never can tell. After kicking myself around the driveway for a while, I got serious and began investigating. Looks like the damage had started before we bought the trailer, because there were signs of "quick fixes" to a leak in the roof in that general area that were done before I bought it. I only found it because we found mold just starting in the corner in the back of the top bunk. I climbed my big 'ole but up in there to clean it out and found the wood behind the wallpaper to be MUSH.
Anyhoo, after spending a few hours Saturday exploring my chances of success in ripping it apart, tempoarily resealing the roof to keep water out, I came back into the house to do more research on how to peel back the rubber roof without making it worse. DW Nancy was talking with a friend, and I could tell something fishy was up. She was not sure how to approach me on this, but was thinking of just trading it in and making the plunge!. Did I ever tell you how much I love this woman?

So, we spent a few hours yesterday looking at some trailers and have sort of settled on two. There is a Jayco Jay Flight G2 with a very similar floor plan to the one we have but with a slide out to give more room (for a reasonable price) and a Keystone Passport Ultralite 30 foot bunkhouse that the whole family likes the floor plan (for $3k more). I like the quality of Jayco so far, but DW says that there are just enough differences and less storage space inside the Jayco that it would bother her because she would want it to be like our old one. The Keystone is much bigger when open and the bunk area slides out to make a small "room" where the kids could set up video games and not take up the dining area. After spending a week in the trailer in the rain, she knows how important that can be!
So, we are thinking this through, but have decided that with our love for camping and all the fun we have on multiple adventures each year, we'd rather do this now while the kids are 9, 10 and 17.
I've read mixed reviews on the Keystone Passports, but many people seem to have added that no brand is immune to potential problems, more important is how the dealer makes good on them when discovered.
Any other advice on new TT purchasing that I should know? I've heard you should have the dealer "challenge" the seals with a garden hose during initial walk through, along with checking any/all windows, plumbing, etc.