Hello All,
I am coming here as a last resort after contacting my dealer, and the Heartland corporate offices without any success. This story is pretty long and I would appreciate anybody who takes the time to hear it out and give me some good advice.
I purchased a 2013 Big Horn 3875FB 8 months ago for around $75k. As many of you know, this is one of the highest end units Heartland makes, and it was decked out to the max. I was extremely excited about receiving this RV as many of you know the feeling. Over the past 8 months since purchasing, I have had 4 incidents concerning this RV that have been nothing short of heart breaking and have left me trying to sell the unit for a fraction of what I paid a few months ago.
First: The dealership I ordered the RV from, La Mesa in West Palm Beach, FL, completely butchered my order for a custom spec'd out RV. Some of you may know, when ordering a Big Horn, there are 2 full pages that complete a custom order. The first page is mostly the standard inclusions, and the second page is all options to add on. When submitting my order for build to Heartland, La Mesa only included page 1 of 2, essentially having them build the RV without any of the options I had selected. Many of these options such as flooring (wood vs tile) could not be fixed once the rig was delivered. In retrospect I should have told these folks to "eat" the RV and left it on the lot, but my wife and I had already taken our two weeks off work starting the day the RV arrived and could not be cancelled. We were very excited to take an extended road trip, so I made the commitment to purchase the "wrong" RV that I had not ordered.
La Mesa did everything in their power to rectify this problem by adding most of the options I selected after the fact, but this meant having to drive my RV to their shop 1.5 hours each direction, and have it in repair for about 2 weeks while they waited for things to be shipped. Needless to say, this should have been an indication of things to come...
Second: On my very first trip with this RV, the very first time opening cabinets and doors, they would literally fall off the hinges. I have never in my life seen such poor craftsmanship on the cabinetry inside this coach. I had to bring my coach into repair 3 TIMES to fix the same door that kept falling off the hinges because it was built with staples. I really think Heartland should be ashamed for advertising "Amish Cabinetry" in their coaches because this stuff is really junk.
Third: This is where it starts getting good. After owning the RV for about 3 months and using it for all of 15 days, I had my first major malfunction requiring repairs. A part of the electrical system that converts shore/generator power to a usable 12v circuit inside the coach fried. This made the coach completely unusable and I couldn't even operate the front landing gears to hitch up and bring into repair. Eventually we got it into the shop, required about 2 weeks of repair and several thousand dollars if it were not covered.
Fourth: WHILE AT THE SHOP PULLING OUT OF THE PARKING LOT FROM THE PREVIOUS MENTIONED REPAIR, I found that my bedroom slide out made a loud grinding noise and could not retract anymore. I left the rig at the dealership YET AGAIN because the motor that pulls the slide out in/out had ground its gears and needed to be replaced, which had a 14 day lead time for delivery.
Conclusion: After dealing with these problems, I am terrified for what the future holds for this unit. Why am I having components of this RV that should have a lifetime of 15+ years dying within the first 8 months? If this unit were not covered, I would have probably spent over $6K in repairs for manufacturing defects in the coach (The dealership refused to give me solid figures for what repairs would have cost because I told them I was going to corporate. Classy guys!!) . I find it completely unacceptable that my RV is having major malfunctions not related to my use just a few months out of the factory. The warranty runs out in 4 months and I am terrified for the problems lurking in the future. This rig was built over a period of the year where the factory shuts down for 2 weeks and resumes building after. I truly believe this rig was built poorly because the workers were excited for vacation, just like you never buy a car built on Friday.
So, what I'm really asking:
Is there any possibility Heartland will intervene and rectify this issue? By rectify, I mean take this lemon of an RV back, and ship me a new one.
As mentioned before, I paid $75K for this RV brand new. I am contacting Camping World right now because I want to sell it before the warranty runs out and I'm responsible for repairs out of pocket. I will likely take a massive hit on the selling price probably losing $30K because of this. I am completely heartbroken over this series of events and I had the giddy excitement all new RV owners get, and it has been destroyed by these problems. Any help would be appreciated.
Thank you,
D.Petri
I am coming here as a last resort after contacting my dealer, and the Heartland corporate offices without any success. This story is pretty long and I would appreciate anybody who takes the time to hear it out and give me some good advice.
I purchased a 2013 Big Horn 3875FB 8 months ago for around $75k. As many of you know, this is one of the highest end units Heartland makes, and it was decked out to the max. I was extremely excited about receiving this RV as many of you know the feeling. Over the past 8 months since purchasing, I have had 4 incidents concerning this RV that have been nothing short of heart breaking and have left me trying to sell the unit for a fraction of what I paid a few months ago.
First: The dealership I ordered the RV from, La Mesa in West Palm Beach, FL, completely butchered my order for a custom spec'd out RV. Some of you may know, when ordering a Big Horn, there are 2 full pages that complete a custom order. The first page is mostly the standard inclusions, and the second page is all options to add on. When submitting my order for build to Heartland, La Mesa only included page 1 of 2, essentially having them build the RV without any of the options I had selected. Many of these options such as flooring (wood vs tile) could not be fixed once the rig was delivered. In retrospect I should have told these folks to "eat" the RV and left it on the lot, but my wife and I had already taken our two weeks off work starting the day the RV arrived and could not be cancelled. We were very excited to take an extended road trip, so I made the commitment to purchase the "wrong" RV that I had not ordered.
La Mesa did everything in their power to rectify this problem by adding most of the options I selected after the fact, but this meant having to drive my RV to their shop 1.5 hours each direction, and have it in repair for about 2 weeks while they waited for things to be shipped. Needless to say, this should have been an indication of things to come...
Second: On my very first trip with this RV, the very first time opening cabinets and doors, they would literally fall off the hinges. I have never in my life seen such poor craftsmanship on the cabinetry inside this coach. I had to bring my coach into repair 3 TIMES to fix the same door that kept falling off the hinges because it was built with staples. I really think Heartland should be ashamed for advertising "Amish Cabinetry" in their coaches because this stuff is really junk.
Third: This is where it starts getting good. After owning the RV for about 3 months and using it for all of 15 days, I had my first major malfunction requiring repairs. A part of the electrical system that converts shore/generator power to a usable 12v circuit inside the coach fried. This made the coach completely unusable and I couldn't even operate the front landing gears to hitch up and bring into repair. Eventually we got it into the shop, required about 2 weeks of repair and several thousand dollars if it were not covered.
Fourth: WHILE AT THE SHOP PULLING OUT OF THE PARKING LOT FROM THE PREVIOUS MENTIONED REPAIR, I found that my bedroom slide out made a loud grinding noise and could not retract anymore. I left the rig at the dealership YET AGAIN because the motor that pulls the slide out in/out had ground its gears and needed to be replaced, which had a 14 day lead time for delivery.
Conclusion: After dealing with these problems, I am terrified for what the future holds for this unit. Why am I having components of this RV that should have a lifetime of 15+ years dying within the first 8 months? If this unit were not covered, I would have probably spent over $6K in repairs for manufacturing defects in the coach (The dealership refused to give me solid figures for what repairs would have cost because I told them I was going to corporate. Classy guys!!) . I find it completely unacceptable that my RV is having major malfunctions not related to my use just a few months out of the factory. The warranty runs out in 4 months and I am terrified for the problems lurking in the future. This rig was built over a period of the year where the factory shuts down for 2 weeks and resumes building after. I truly believe this rig was built poorly because the workers were excited for vacation, just like you never buy a car built on Friday.
So, what I'm really asking:
Is there any possibility Heartland will intervene and rectify this issue? By rectify, I mean take this lemon of an RV back, and ship me a new one.
As mentioned before, I paid $75K for this RV brand new. I am contacting Camping World right now because I want to sell it before the warranty runs out and I'm responsible for repairs out of pocket. I will likely take a massive hit on the selling price probably losing $30K because of this. I am completely heartbroken over this series of events and I had the giddy excitement all new RV owners get, and it has been destroyed by these problems. Any help would be appreciated.
Thank you,
D.Petri
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