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03-13-2023, 09:52 AM
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#1
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Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: Kent, WA
Posts: 1,087
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100,000 miles on a Diesel Pusher
Longtime Rver, but looking to move to a class a diesel. Should I be worried about an rv that has 100,000 miles on it vs one that is say around 40K to 50K? What should I look for, besides the normal RV issues?
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Arnold 
2006 Holiday Rambler Endeavor 40 PAQ
2017 Ram 2500 Big Horn 6.4 Hemi
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03-13-2023, 09:55 AM
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#2
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Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2014
Posts: 6,722
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If properly maintained, no worries.
We sold our 1993 Foretravel with 170,000 miles on it and it is still going strong for the new owner.
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Brett Wolfe
Ex: 2003 Alpine 38FDDS. Ex: 1997 Safari Sahara. Ex: 1993 Foretravel U240
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03-13-2023, 09:57 AM
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#3
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Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2008
Posts: 3,491
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Look for maintenance records, if none are available walk away. A poorly maintained diesel will cost BIG DOLLARS to repair.
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2013 Tiffin Phaeton 40QBH
2016 Chevrolet Equinox LTZ AWD V6
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03-13-2023, 10:10 AM
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#4
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Senior Member
Monaco Owners Club
Join Date: Jun 2014
Posts: 13,202
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Depending on what engine but most will go 500K if properly maintained.
I have 117K miles on mine and it still has many miles left on it. I have been doing oil and coolant analysis on mine just to confirm.
So if you find a rig you like and it ticks all the boxes I'd suggest fluid analysis on it before you buy. Engine, transmission, and generator oil. Do a coolant analysis also.
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Jim J
2002 Monaco Windsor 38 PKD Cummins ISC 350 8.3L
2005 Jeep Grand Cherokee w/5.7 Hemi
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03-13-2023, 11:31 AM
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#5
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Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2021
Posts: 1,293
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The enemy of diesel engines is not using them. No, I would not be worried about 100k, just as mentioned above understanding the maintenance records is advisable. Not everyone keeps perfect documentation, so agreed the testing shows the truth. Some advise "walk away" and you might be walking away from a good buy. I can tell you decent used DP's are in short supply around here.
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2004 Safari Cheetah PDQ 330 Cat
2020 Ram EcoDiesel toad
USAF SERE
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03-13-2023, 02:11 PM
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#6
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Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2021
Location: California
Posts: 236
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Depend on what type of RV you are looking at. If it is a Newell, Prevost, Foretravel, 100k is just the beginning of it's life.
If you are looking at Monaco, Country Coach, American Coach etc., I think it may be in mid life. I will expect 200k miles from those. Why? I tried seach these types of coaches with over 200k miles on RVTraders, there aren't much (if at all). But plenty of ones around 100k.
If any lower rank coaches, I am really not so confident about them over 100k.
Of course, it all depends on the maintance like others said. You can't see the inside of the engine for sure, but if it looks relatively rust free, engine sounds ok, not too much soot, exhausts normally, mostly clean it probably is fine.
Lastly, be ready to be dirty. If you are handy, they may still be affordable. Otherwise, expect to spend major money on them. Even my relatively good shape 100k Monaco Windsor have problems all the time, small or big. It would cost me more than the worth of the coach had I hired people to work on it.
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03-13-2023, 03:06 PM
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#7
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Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2013
Posts: 539
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You need to be more specific:
What do you want to spend
What year are you looking at
You will find that almost no one has detailed records as dealers throw away most records.
I bought my Beaver one year ago for 20%of new now in the economic environment it is about 16% of new. If you buy newer the % goes up.
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2014 Volvo 630 Heren Bed ET Hitch SOLD
2017 New Horizons Majestic 35 foot SOLD
2002 Beaver Marquis Emerald C-12 Cat 505 HP
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03-13-2023, 03:14 PM
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#8
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Senior Member
Entegra Owners Club Spartan Chassis
Join Date: Oct 2017
Posts: 1,364
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On the surface I would not worry about the 100K.
If properly maintained.
For most motorhomes the house will wear out before the chassis and engine.
Some people do 3K a year and others do 15K a year. Both are fine if they take care of everything.
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 Hal and Pam
2022 Entegra Cornerstone W
2020 Ford Edge ST
Sold 2017 Entegra Cornerstone B
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03-13-2023, 04:50 PM
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#9
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Senior Member
Fleetwood Owners Club Freightliner Owners Club
Join Date: Jan 2019
Location: Wadsworth, Ohio
Posts: 350
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Ours has over 90,000 miles and no issues above normal ware, Cummins 350 should go 200,000 easy.
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Barney & Penny with our two puppies Lucy & Dixie
2008 Fleetwood Discovery
2020 Jeep Cherokee Trailhawk
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03-13-2023, 05:53 PM
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#10
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Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2013
Location: Lake Havasu City, AZ & Plover, WI
Posts: 5,926
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The 450 ISL in the coach we sold last Sept had 83,000 miles on it. It still did not use any oil in 10,000 mile annual change intervals. I would expect it to run 300,000 miles or more without a problem if the new owner maintains it like I did. Both the 450 ISL and the ISX 600 hp Cummins that is in my sons Newell will last longer than most people will keep a coach if serviced regularly.
FWIW 199,000 miles is only 2200 hours at 45 mph which is close to the overall average of the time the engine is running. I overhauled tractor engines at 6,000 hours and they worked close to 90% power vs the 40-50% power pushing a motorhome down the road. 6,000 hours on a motorhome is 270,000 easy miles by comparison.
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2013 43 QGP Allegro Bus ( SOLD )
2013 Avalanche
2000 AEV TJ
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03-13-2023, 06:58 PM
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#11
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Moderator Emeritus
Join Date: Jan 2000
Location: West Palm Beach, FL. USA
Posts: 26,324
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A big diesel in a motorhome will go 500k miles between engine rebuilds (pistons & such), but other components (starters, water pumps, alternators, etc) last about the same as in a gas engine, so yeah you will start to see component failures around 100k miles. Air brakes in typical diesel motorhome use are probably good for 200k miles before new brake pads are needed. Air suspension (air bags) mostly die of old age rather than mileage - figure 15-20 years.
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Gary Brinck
Former owner of 2004 American Tradition and several other RVs
Home is West Palm Beach, FL
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03-13-2023, 07:03 PM
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#12
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Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2021
Posts: 1,293
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Sinyyl
Depend on what type of RV you are looking at. If it is a Newell, Prevost, Foretravel, 100k is just the beginning of it's life.
If you are looking at Monaco, Country Coach, American Coach etc., I think it may be in mid life. I will expect 200k miles from those. Why? I tried seach these types of coaches with over 200k miles on RVTraders, there aren't much (if at all). But plenty of ones around 100k.
If any lower rank coaches, I am really not so confident about them over 100k.
Of course, it all depends on the maintance like others said. You can't see the inside of the engine for sure, but if it looks relatively rust free, engine sounds ok, not too much soot, exhausts normally, mostly clean it probably is fine.
Lastly, be ready to be dirty. If you are handy, they may still be affordable. Otherwise, expect to spend major money on them. Even my relatively good shape 100k Monaco Windsor have problems all the time, small or big. It would cost me more than the worth of the coach had I hired people to work on it.
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I'd be curious about any facts to back this up. These coaches are motors, transmissions and chassis. If you are aware of a make of motor or transmission that is somehow less dependable based on stats, by all means share.
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2004 Safari Cheetah PDQ 330 Cat
2020 Ram EcoDiesel toad
USAF SERE
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03-13-2023, 07:13 PM
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#13
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Senior Member
Monaco Owners Club
Join Date: Jun 2014
Posts: 13,202
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I managed mines (and complexes). We tracked maintenance very closely and engine hours were the metric we used.
The main pieces of equipment was run hard. trucks and loaders were the work horses. And the environment was pretty harsh.
I've seen engine run +10,000 hours. We did oil changes every 150 hours which was ~7-8 days (6 hours per shift X 3 shifts per day). Oil analysis was done every oil change.
We would also track costs and if an engine started to show higher costs we'd pull it and have it rebuilt. We compared engines on a $/hour basis and knew what engines were performing and which ones weren't. We could get several rebuilds out of an engine.
I had one engine that just kept running, no signs of problems, good performance, good oil samples with no signs of metal wear. It was a freak. So I decided to just let it run, we got 14,000 hours on it. I figured this would be equivalent to 750K miles.
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Jim J
2002 Monaco Windsor 38 PKD Cummins ISC 350 8.3L
2005 Jeep Grand Cherokee w/5.7 Hemi
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03-13-2023, 07:59 PM
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#14
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Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2001
Location: North America somewhere
Posts: 28,561
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I agree about the motor and transmission, but all the suspension, drivetrain and steering parts have that mileage too; plus the appliances are old well used and may fail at any point.
The high-end MH's are on a commercial chassis built to last a million miles, but not without schedulet maintenance.
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2000 Winnebago Ultimate Freedom USQ40JD , ISC 8.3 Cummins 350, Spartan MM Chassis. USA IN 1SG 11B5MX,Infantry retired;Good Sam Life member,FMCA. " My fellow Americans, ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country. John F. Kennedy
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