
Originally Posted by
BCMtnHound
When discussing the wife's cabin, and the family desire to spend more time camping, I said if she sold her place, we would buy a nice travel trailer (she is done with the tent thing). I foolishly joked she should look at airstreams and maybe see if an older model of comparable price to near-new square box trailer was of interest to her. I suppose this could go into that other thread, but I come home from from a work conference in the fall of 2017, and she asks if I mind driving to Edmonton to pick up her new airstream. Not some older model either - a 2010 20'FC similar to the bambi east or bust pictured. It only took her until this last fall to sell the cabin to pay for the trailer. She absolutely loves it, it's her spare bedroom when she is on night shift and was planned to be a quarantine quarters ala NASA space program if the COVIDF hit one of us, and also doubles as a spare room when family or friends visit.
As Iceman linked, the airstream forums are the place for just about everything you could ever want to know about the trailers and motorhomes. Airstreams classifieds is a great resource for used; we got ours on the kijiji. I am very partial to the 24' early 70's landyachts similar to Jax's - best combination of floorplan, lounge space and bath, with decent sized tanks. Wife loves the floor layout of the 20' with the super large kitchen and full bath.
If looking at used, set a price and stick with it cause they aren't cheap to restore. Note that almost all the appliances (fridge, range, hot water heater, furnace) are all owned by the same parent company supplying the entire industry (German Domentic). The aluminum frame and skin doesn't rot like a stick-frame trailer, but a leak either from outside or from the plumbing within will make short work of the wood floor, and with the enclosed belly-pan, the frame itself is steel and can get pretty rusty. A full frame-off restoration along with entire interior will cost north of $40000, which explains some of the prices of the older units that have had this work done. If you get one with good appliances, a solid floor and running gear, an interior remodel to update the cabinets and upholstery should be under $20000. Note that in the 80's the type and coating of aluminum changed - the later models will not polish like the old ones, and the clearcoat does need some TLC a couple times a year or it will start to peel. Old ones polish up very nice, but this needs to be done every other year to keep that polish lighting grass fires (no shit). Some parts are costly and difficult to source, others are only available 2nd hand most often via the airstream forums, and others can be got for a steal from various suppliers/ebay/amazon, so don't be afraid to shop around. The best single upgrade I made to our was a 3" lift to the dexter axle, raising that back end a few when the departure angle gets tight. Also, it is generally bad form to attach a hitch to the rear to put in a bike tray - on some models this increases the chance of separation between the lower steel frame and upper airstream frame, not to mention it can mess with the weight distribution, resulting in dangerous sway. Some have been successful doing this, others have wrecked their trailer. So the bikes wither go in the bed of the truck, or up on the rack with the boat. But otherwise, the frame design is far more sturdy and will last longer than a comparable weight other brand trailer, rot of the stick frame notwithstanding. Check the roof, and ask if the seams for all the appliances/vents/etc have been re-sealed at least every 10yrs (our is due this summer). And a dozen other little things that keep popping up in my head.
I think Piotrowski was restoring an older airstream. May this thread will get him back into the collective...
Happy hunting!
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