her name is Phae
Posted: Sun Jan 11, 2009 9:18 pm
I'm trying to redo Photobucket images so thought I'd get a few of our MH in here.
The caption for this photos of "Phae" should be --"don't let this happen to you" taken in the parking lot at Scotty's Castle in June of 2002, just a couple of months after we bought her. Our air dryer fell off (doesn't dry clothes, it drys the air in the air brake system is a vital component), a problem caused during production at the factory. Tiffin was wonderful and paid for the whole mess.
Since then, like all RV's we've had issues but none have been serious enough to warrant our wanting to sell the rig. Tiffin has been wonderful. We've made 3 trips to Red Bay, AL for minor repairs, and alterations, most of which the company paid for. Lots of Tiffin coach owners just love visiting the repair facility and touring the factory. Don't we all love looking at the new inovations in motorhomes.
We bought our 2002 Phaeton new and have no ideas about upgrading/trading in etc. The price of RVs has doubled in the 6 years since we bought ours so...unless I hit the Power Ball...we'll just redo our rig. And our rig gets close to 10 mpg where as new rigs get 1/2 that.
Having an RV of any kind is a constant learning experience. Hardly has there been a year when we've not had to call the factory with questions. We've had water leaks, frozen icemaker valves (why we just unhooked it and buy bags of ice), a rear inside dual blow out (while I was driving), a broken windshield (again while I was driving and it was another MH that tossed a rock at us), frozen water lines, a broken awning spring, replaced the satillite dish with a dome, had our furniture fabric fail (therefore we made a trip to Dubuque, IA for new upholstry at Flexsteel), those imfamous day/night shade strings break (on all but two of the windows), hit a "road gator" (again me driving) which broke loose one jack spring (another trip to a plant near Moscow, IA for 2 new jacks) after we replace one set of springs ourselves (I don't recommend it), a lightning strike not 12 feet away (taking out one AC unit and causing various other problems we didn't discover for months), ran into a huge pile of dirt from a huge hole in a dark RV park (lots of scratches but not serious), scraped up the nose on a steep incline, got lost more times than I can remember, ran over a wooden picnic table (in the dark, another reason we don't travel after dark), and have been from coast to coast racking up over 50,000 miles in 6 years.
Mostly we like being parked more than rolling. That does not mean we are done traveling. We have many more destinations to explore.
The caption for this photos of "Phae" should be --"don't let this happen to you" taken in the parking lot at Scotty's Castle in June of 2002, just a couple of months after we bought her. Our air dryer fell off (doesn't dry clothes, it drys the air in the air brake system is a vital component), a problem caused during production at the factory. Tiffin was wonderful and paid for the whole mess.
Since then, like all RV's we've had issues but none have been serious enough to warrant our wanting to sell the rig. Tiffin has been wonderful. We've made 3 trips to Red Bay, AL for minor repairs, and alterations, most of which the company paid for. Lots of Tiffin coach owners just love visiting the repair facility and touring the factory. Don't we all love looking at the new inovations in motorhomes.
We bought our 2002 Phaeton new and have no ideas about upgrading/trading in etc. The price of RVs has doubled in the 6 years since we bought ours so...unless I hit the Power Ball...we'll just redo our rig. And our rig gets close to 10 mpg where as new rigs get 1/2 that.
Having an RV of any kind is a constant learning experience. Hardly has there been a year when we've not had to call the factory with questions. We've had water leaks, frozen icemaker valves (why we just unhooked it and buy bags of ice), a rear inside dual blow out (while I was driving), a broken windshield (again while I was driving and it was another MH that tossed a rock at us), frozen water lines, a broken awning spring, replaced the satillite dish with a dome, had our furniture fabric fail (therefore we made a trip to Dubuque, IA for new upholstry at Flexsteel), those imfamous day/night shade strings break (on all but two of the windows), hit a "road gator" (again me driving) which broke loose one jack spring (another trip to a plant near Moscow, IA for 2 new jacks) after we replace one set of springs ourselves (I don't recommend it), a lightning strike not 12 feet away (taking out one AC unit and causing various other problems we didn't discover for months), ran into a huge pile of dirt from a huge hole in a dark RV park (lots of scratches but not serious), scraped up the nose on a steep incline, got lost more times than I can remember, ran over a wooden picnic table (in the dark, another reason we don't travel after dark), and have been from coast to coast racking up over 50,000 miles in 6 years.
Mostly we like being parked more than rolling. That does not mean we are done traveling. We have many more destinations to explore.