by Anniepoo » Wed Dec 04, 2013 2:56 pm
Cabovers should have grab rails , no clutching a matress while climbing down
The lighting in most RV's is controlled from switches next to the light. Ergonomically that's a terrible placement, I'd move the
switches to sane locations.
My current rig has a light in the bathroom. You can go in there, turn on the light, go out, close the door, and run the light all night....
not good when boondocking. Should be an indicator
There should be a water pump on off switch near the kitchen sink, and one near the darn potty!
(probably this means push button 'start' and 'stop')
Class C's should all come with cab steps. My last rig had them, they were a real luxury
The steps on the side door would make a great student industrial design project. Current steps are either manual and a pain to
put out/take up, or electric and way too much gizmometry
in general, if it can be left on and bad things happen, there should be an indicator light on a central control panel and that panel should be visible so you don't have to get up in the middle of the night to see it!
My RV has two chairs that are bolted to the floor. If they were on some sort of mechanism so they could be 'unlocked' and moved about I'd have
a flexible living area.
The ergonomics of my sofa bed are terrible. It's a smidge too far from the floor to the cushion top. To avoid leg pain when sitting here using the set-up table and working on computer, I have to put a box under my feet. And I'm 5-8!
Is there a way to design a ladder that locks to the bed so it can't fall, but doesn't require, as mine does, holding the ladder out horizontal and going through conniptions to get it attached, or has some punched steel skin tearing clip thing right where you are likely to put yoru hand as you get in & out, as an old RV of mine had?
The light over the cabover is usually just one more of the standard fixtures. That's crazy! if you're using it, you're about 9 inches from it. Cabover light could be much better designed.
There's no place in a cabover for a bed book, glasses, and so on.
There's no designed space for trash or dirty clothes
There's no designed place for a pet
Exactly why is all that space taken up by that passenger seat in the cab?
I often look at 'step vans' - what most people call a 'bread truck' and think what a great starting point for an RV they'd make
without involving too much gizmometry to go out of whack, that curtain that goes inside the windshield in the cab - does putting that thing up have to be such a contortion exercise?
It'd be nice to be able to open and close the propane valve from inside. More people might actually close the thing if it didn't mean a trip outside and falling on one's knees in prayer, supplication, and fumbling to do it.
Green tortoise removed the seats from it's busses and found it's a much more pleasant trip. Of course their hippy kid passengers usually don't have the arthritic.
That forced air heat's silly for a boondocker.
When I die I'm gonna be cremated. I can't stand the idea of spending eternity in a box with no wheels.