This thread is sad. It highlights why America is a second rate nation in the world today. The whole mantra of "we suck less" than the next builder is a sorry perspective to bring to the market. Guess the attitude is why we lose manufacturing jobs overseas daily...they can perform the same poor craftsmanship for a fraction of the cost.
Small changes like protecting holes cut through wood or other materials to run wiring is a small step to craftsmanship and quality. I have openings in the coach I've found that look like a gopher chewed through the plywood to run electrical wiring. No preventive measures at all to avoid chaffing and potential fire hazards. I know, a S&B may be similar, but it's not a rolling earthquake moving down the highway either. I fix what I can find and see, but what about the spaces I can't access easily or at all?
Even if you can't find skilled, reliable, drug-free labor to do the build, it doesn't explain how a critical electrical component ends up being installed directly beneath a water hazard with high-failure rates. The design approach, at the very least, could use a serious Quality overhaul. That wouldn't fix the craftsmanship on the line, but it sure would eliminate some significant problems in the design layout of the coaches rolling off Heartland's factory.
One thing I can control is my decision to purchase and I know I'll be looking at the purchase process differently the next time around.