I bought a 1991 Winnebago Warrior RV in Oklahoma for $6000. It had dryrot tires. Spent 1500 on brand new tires. But I took it to my sister's house. And the mechanic in the back. Stole my coach battery. I heard that generator turn over one time. I figure now that the same guy, stole parts off of my generator for his stuff. But she runs almost forever on a gallon of gas. I can run the motor with the heater on high. It will heat the rest of the house. It gets super hot in here. Everything works on here. I had a small smoking problem with the breaker bars. Got the breakers replaced. Then they caught fire. No worries, stopped it before it got too bad. It's a V6. And heaven forbid you turn a sharp corner. Anything you have sitting up on counter tops. Goes flying. So I make sure I have stuff I don't want to be flying and breaking. RIP tablet.
@@nunyabznz3029 I didn't bother to find out. Toyota issued an extended warranty to owners. If the gaskets failed, they'd replace them. If they didn't fail, they didn't touch it. So the recall work was only done to vehicles with gaskets that failed. At least that's what the federally issued recall announcement stated.
You have to run the generator for the appliances to work? I assumed when the engine was on it would power everything on As well. Can solar panels be added to keep everything on for full time living?
@@kmoreno8278 yes the appliances require 110v, so generator or shore power. The water heater and water pump operate on 12v. Solar can be added to power 12v fixtures and charge the battery. A power inverter would allow the solar production to be turned into 110v but still requires batteries for a place to hold electricity.
@@jaygold4467 Change is not destruction. People make changes because these rigs are fully depreciated and worn out, and owners want it to feel comfortable for their style and preferences. The value here is not in the Winnebago but in the Toyota 😉
I always have liked those Toyota motorhomes . One of my favorites ones . Personally I’d love to own one
Thanks for sharing 👍
Great Presentation!
I bought a 1991 Winnebago Warrior RV in Oklahoma for $6000. It had dryrot tires. Spent 1500 on brand new tires. But I took it to my sister's house. And the mechanic in the back. Stole my coach battery. I heard that generator turn over one time. I figure now that the same guy, stole parts off of my generator for his stuff. But she runs almost forever on a gallon of gas. I can run the motor with the heater on high. It will heat the rest of the house. It gets super hot in here. Everything works on here. I had a small smoking problem with the breaker bars. Got the breakers replaced. Then they caught fire. No worries, stopped it before it got too bad. It's a V6. And heaven forbid you turn a sharp corner. Anything you have sitting up on counter tops. Goes flying. So I make sure I have stuff I don't want to be flying and breaking. RIP tablet.
I know the 6cylinder motors from early 90s had the recall about the head gasket. Did you find out how to see if your unit completed the recall?
@@nunyabznz3029 I didn't bother to find out. Toyota issued an extended warranty to owners. If the gaskets failed, they'd replace them. If they didn't fail, they didn't touch it. So the recall work was only done to vehicles with gaskets that failed. At least that's what the federally issued recall announcement stated.
Nice Rig for it's age..
What does the propane run? Just the cooktop?
@@nunyabznz3029 depends. I got that one on Amazon for $100 or so
Nice! ❤ mine!
You have to run the generator for the appliances to work? I assumed when the engine was on it would power everything on As well. Can solar panels be added to keep everything on for full time living?
@@kmoreno8278 yes the appliances require 110v, so generator or shore power. The water heater and water pump operate on 12v. Solar can be added to power 12v fixtures and charge the battery. A power inverter would allow the solar production to be turned into 110v but still requires batteries for a place to hold electricity.
Just get on google??? Fix it!
Butchered. Why do people destroy these?
@@jaygold4467 Change is not destruction. People make changes because these rigs are fully depreciated and worn out, and owners want it to feel comfortable for their style and preferences. The value here is not in the Winnebago but in the Toyota 😉