Figure 1. Our First RV was a Starcraft Popup, like this one. Our second was a 26ft Forest River TT.
This is “like” the one we used. Very simple, not much more than a place to sleep.
Note how unlevel the trailer is, even with empty tanks which were forward of the axles.
Figure 2 Third RV: Forest River Sunseeker class C, Fourth RV: Tiffin Open Road 32SA Class A. Daughter’s RVs: Rockwood 36 ft TT and Nexus Maybach 36M class A.
Figure 3 Plastic covered sawdust counter material in Forest River class
Figure 4 Composite wood used in budget RVs. Lighter, cheaper, super thin vinyl covering, not waterproof.
Figure 5 Hidden quality problems: Sloppy construction underneath the glitz.
FIgure 6 Trailer weight tagFigure 7 Simple electrical diagram and AC waveform.
Figure 8 Lead-acid charge chart
Figure 9 Multi-meter examples
Figure 10 Handy toolbox
Figure 11 Parts Bins
In addition, there are several plastic tubs of misc parts, plumbing parts and electrical parts.
Figure 12 Sample fresh water diagram
Figure 12 Small tool bag, one of several.
I have several such bags and have since added plastic luggage labels.
Figure 13 Contents of Small Tool Bag
Figure 14 Large Tool Bag
Figure 15 More tools from large bag
Figure 16 Few additional tools
Sample fresh water diagramFigure 18 Towed Connection box, travel trailer
Figure 19 Inside Towed Connection box
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