B2Play
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Was published today, with lots of mods and tweaks to the 59G, can't wait to see what they might do with the 59K. They are running AC on the new lithium system!
Video by FitRV is here:
Video by FitRV is here:
Was published today, with lots of mods and tweaks to the 59G, can't wait to see what they might do with the 59K. They are running AC on the new lithium system!
Wood construction by staple gun likely powered by lithium batteries, wheel well insulation by paint and cargo stuffing, a long overhead cabinet good for piling up while breaking, what a mixed bag. Had no issue with sliders, light weight, simple and works, certainly shiny solid rosewood would look better.
My biggest concern is the ground clearance. One good curb hit and it will not just take out the alternator, but possibly the lithium battery bank.
+1, re: lithium in particular.
During my time living and driving throughout greater Houston, I've hit an intact kitchen chair (heavy granny-style oak construction), a detached car bumper cover, a pressure-treated 4x4 fence post (8-footer), and numerous large retread chunks. All of them appeared suddenly in my lane and were unavoidable.
Thankfully the only thing I've hit so far in my Class B have been retread pieces, with only minimal damage. But I had one guy email me because he hit something that tore off his exhaust train and his repair shop was having trouble getting a new one re-installed. They wanted photographs of how our model of Class B had the pipe re-routed by the generator, so they could have a go-by.
Moral of the story: Collisions with big highway debris pieces are inevitable. The impact zone is not where lithium cells need to be.
+1, re: lithium in particular.
During my time living and driving throughout greater Houston, I've hit an intact kitchen chair (heavy granny-style oak construction), a detached car bumper cover, a pressure-treated 4x4 fence post (8-footer), and numerous large retread chunks. All of them appeared suddenly in my lane and were unavoidable.
Thankfully the only thing I've hit so far in my Class B have been retread pieces, with only minimal damage. But I had one guy email me because he hit something that tore off his exhaust train and his repair shop was having trouble getting a new one re-installed. They wanted photographs of how our model of Class B had the pipe re-routed by the generator, so they could have a go-by.
Moral of the story: Collisions with big highway debris pieces are inevitable. The impact zone is not where lithium cells need to be.
When they open he cabinets under the bed, the construction quality makes me wince.
What's to wince about? The cabinet is constructed of coated plywood and the sliding doors are acrylic. This change to open cubbies (instead of drawers) to store bulky items is a direct result of WGO actually listening to their customers and giving what they've requested. I think it's fabulous, and more importantly practical for the way most folks use the G.
You're extolling the virtue of the design for which I have no beef but with respect to execution, yes I do wince at the raw wood and the slapdash staple construction in the cubby interior. There are situations where out of sight warrants out of mind but with respect to cabinetry support, IMO, raw wood indiscriminately fastened with staples will eventually involve a customer that's being screwed.
At the very least, this Volta, as well as the WATT Fuel Cell, package proves generators are on their way out. While practical, and they have their use, generators from companies like Onan have somewhat created their own demise by not making their generators as quiet as the current batch of Inverter type generators. In all honesty, with the resources at their disposal, there's no good reason Onan, or someone else, hasn't built a near quiet 3KwH generator.
I will hold my judgment on fuel cells but I am skeptical, many years of development and still going. “there's no good reason Onan, or someone else, hasn't built a near quiet 3KwH generator.” Indeed, or less than 3kW if combined with a right size battery bank. Onan is ancient, loud, no invertor, air cooled, oil scoop lubrication, seems as R&D folks are a sleep there.
I'd rather have the cabinets be screwed, not the buyer. I do think that for the price, the Travato is the best bang for buck there is for a class "B". It may have rough edges, but it is quite usable.
I still would take the generator and the two AGM batteries though, if I went with a Travato. Maybe in 2-3 years, once the bugs were ironed out, things would be different.
Of course, there is battery replacement. The AGM batteries are not too tough to replace, as they are a standard size and voltage. Lithium banks have to be custom made, so I'd not be surprised if replacing the battery bank ran $5-10k, plus requiring specialized labor due to the high voltage circuits.