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Kitchen Location Advantages - Driver or Passside

Yahoo Message Number: 72165
The " Great Room" version of the 98 Allure the slide was short and quite deep. approaching 30 inches.

Oue Deschutes models with the sliding kitchen counter and sofa was a little shallower, 24", and much

longer, We suffered from to much weight on the left front tire causing many recalls, until the ride

height valves were rotated from two in the front to two in the rear and one in the front. With the 40'

models having the tire size increased from 275 R 70 to 275R80. Those of us with the 36' 10" model

had to either accept the under rated tires or upgrade them on our own. The weight difference on the

from tires could be as high as 1100lbs DS to PS. By moving the ride height valves to the rear almost

400 pounds could be transferred off the DS front tire preventing dangerous blow outs.

When you park if the coaches are facing the same direction then looking out the dining room window

places you across from the next door neighbors duals or front door . If you are parked nose to tail then

you facing the adjacent coaches bedroom or mid- section. I see no advantage to either. It would

seem to me the direction as compared to the compass, the path of the sun, and prevailing winds would

be more important.
TWI 2004 Intrigue 11731, 98 Allure 30255.

Original Message:
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From: daronha@... Date: Wed, 22 Jun 2011 14:11:09 -0400 (EDT) To: Country-Coach-Owners@yahoogroups.com Subject: Re: [Country-Coach-Owners] Kitchen Location Advantages - Driver or Passside

Mark,

I have a "Great Room" single slide model. My galley is on the driver (slide out) side. Dining table is on

passenger side. I have owned both types. I prefer this configuration as the dining table view is of the

active patio and awning side. Of course, whether there is a scenic view or not depends on the particular
campsite.

The galley slide out requires more complicated articulating tubing for plumbing and electrical

connections and is generally heavier due to kitchen gadgets and food storage. It is generally easier to build a coach with the galley on the passenger (non slide out) side. Slide outs are all very heavy

compared to solid sidewalls, so coach load design is pretty tricky especially considering varying levels of fluids in tanks. On coaches that have a dinette slide out, the extension is often deeper due to less

weight being cantilevered out from the coach body.
It sounds like you are considering a dual slide model with driver side galley and bedroom slide. FWIW,
this would be my choice.

Daron Hairabedian, 98 Allure, 30226