"Host" of Barthmobile.com 1/19
| A 6.2 liter GM Diesel? How many miles? What year? How long has it been sitting? What is the climate where its been stored? City/state? If you do go, sign up for something that offers towing in the package as a hedge. Do you know how to read tire codes? Too old of tires will cause problems. New belts, hoses, filters and an oil change are high on the list. Never overheat your coach as the 6.2 can't take it. Drive with one eye on the gauges at all times. Purchase extra fuel filters and know how to replace them. Put in fuel additives and then fill it up while at the pump, this will insure good mixing of the additives. ˙ʎ˙u ןןıq- „ǝןƃuɐ ʇuǝɹǝɟɟıp ɐ ɯoɹɟ pןɹoʍ ǝɥʇ ʇɐ ʞooן ɐ ƃuıʞɐʇ sı ǝɟıן oʇ ʇǝɹɔǝs ǝɥʇ„
| | 1990 Barth Regis Widebody 8908 0128 40RDS-C1 L-10 Cummins Allison MT647 Transmission Spartan Chassis | | 1991 Medical Lab Conversion 9102 3709 33S-12 Ford 460 MPFI C6 Transmission Oshkosh Chassis |
Quick Link: Members Only Link To Send Me A Private Message | |
| Posts: 5924 | Location: Newburgh, New York | Member Since: 05-10-2003 |
IP
|
|
First Month Member 11/13
| quote: Originally posted by scottydl: tread depth on RV tires is essentially irrelevant; they will usually wear out due to age long before they show any considerable wear due to mileage. 7-10 years is about the longest you want to go on RV tires, with most veteran RV'ers leaning toward the 7.
My own take is that sitting is the worst thing for RV tires. 1. When sitting, the bottom few degrees of both sidewall and tread are under a permanent deformation, stressing the carcass and the rubber. 2. Heat and flexing release a chemical in the rubber compound that works its way to the surface to protect and prevent brittleness. This is called "blooming", and can only occur during driving. With a used MH, you really don't have any idea of how much exercise the tires got. Sadly, age, mileage and tread depth are meaningless.
.
84 30T PeeThirty-Something, 502 powered
|
| Posts: 6169 | Location: AZ Central Highlands | Member Since: 01-09-2001 |
IP
|
|
3/19
| have no idea where Boonton is. Sometimes forum members are willing to eyeball a coach that is nearby. I have done so once and offered to do so other times. Once, however, the prospective buyer's response was not appreciation, but indignation. Go figure. Most Barth coaches, like countless other old motorhomes, were powered by the venerable old Chevy 454 -- typically in a P30ish 'bread truck' chassis. It is reliable and easy to service with readily-available, relatively affordable components. It is preferable to the typical 6.2 diesel. I say 'typical' because at least one forum member has an exceptional (or maybe I should say 'extraordinary') 6.2. From what little I know, I think the Barth diesel you are much more likely to see would have a Cummins 5.9, not a Detroit 6.2. The former is an excellent engine. |
| Posts: 2003 | Location: Jackson, Michigan, USA | Member Since: 04-18-2004 |
IP
|
|
8/10
| My coach had sat 7 years.
I was fortunate that the nephew of the deceased owner lived nearby and knew the coach. I paid him $1200 labor to replace the belts, hoses, thermostat, drain the fuel, fuel filters, change the coolant, oil, check the front wheel bearings and several other things. I bought 8 new tires locally. A friend went down with me and we had the tires replaced at a tire store about a mile from the owners home. I only had to drive mine 150 miles. About 30 miles from home, one of the inside duals blew. Come to find out, it had those extension hoses on the valve stems that the tire shop did not get on tight. It started to slowly leak. Since I was so close to home, I drove on in at 30 mph.
To go 500 miles, I'd do about the same thing. Think of it as a vacation and an adventure. Have a good attitude...take plenty of time....a week if possible and lots of tools. Be sure and buy towing insurance. Take it easy...don't push the coach. Get one of those laser temperture guns and watch your temps on wheel bearings, radiators etc...or you might be able to find a shipping company even...... Figure out what you are more comfortable with... |
| Posts: 429 | Location: The Great Midwest | Member Since: 12-04-2009 |
IP
|
|