This trailer has seen very little use, and what use it has had has been with people who care about it so, although it is 20 years old, it is as nice as if it were 5 years old.
It is made by Monaco, which is a top notch manufacturer.
When it was new it was a very expensive unit.
All the luxuries were included.
It has Corion counter tops, actual oak cabinet doors, double pane windows, extra insulation, a water heater that daily gave me half hour hot showers, a clothes washer/dryer, two large slides, and a lot of style.
Many trailers feel like cheap bling.
This one does not; it feels like actual quality.
This trailer is a perfect travel companion or a live in unit.
The tires appear to be fairly recent and all the lights and etc worked when I moved it to where it is.
I lived in it though two winters and it was very comfortable, almost like living in a real house.
There are no drafts and heating was accomplished with a couple of electric space heaters without using as much energy as would be the case if it were not so well insulated.
The propane furnace is ducted throughout the house and works well, but I only used it to warm the place up quickly when I was gone long enough that the place was cold.
I didn’t use it for my primary heat because propane is more expensive than electricity.
Summer time was as comfortable as winter due to the extra insulation and ducted air conditioning, but I have always lived in it in the shade of a very lovely tree.
I suppose it would be warmer and the AC would need to work harder if it were parked in an open desert.
Everything works well.
The stove looks like nobody has ever used it and the fridge works perfectly on propane, 110 volt, or 12 volt, although that points out the only thing that doesn’t work so well – the battery.
I’ve always been plugged in so I haven’t worried too much about the battery.
It works well enough plugged in and to run the feet up or down when hitching up, but will only give about 20 or 30 minutes of service unplugged depending on how many lights are on and there are a lot of lights in this rig.
Some of the lights I have converted to LEDs, but not all of them.
Oh, the light over the dining table has a push button type switch.
The button broke off and I have been using a chop stick to turn the light on or off.
Ace Hardware has this switch and it is easy to replace, but I never got around to it.
It’s 12 volt so you won’t get shocked, but a chop stick works also…
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