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03-07-2024, 01:53 PM
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#21
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Winnebago Owner
Join Date: Oct 2020
Location: Asheville, NC
Posts: 1,714
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Normally we cook outside. But inside when it’s cold or raining. And yes, the Micro Minnie range hood vents to outside. You don’t notice it as much in a 37ft MH, but in the small space of the Micro Minnie, using the range heats up the interior really fast (good in winter, bad in summer), lots of humidity released, and odors get funky if you don’t use the fan. Bacon is the worse offender for soiling the hood and smelling up the joint. Yes, big advantages to 37ft coach. Biggest one is you can go to a different part of the coach when you have to break wind, so as not to offend the dw. In a small TT, bad news travels fast.
__________________
Jim. Former, 2021b Micro Minnie 2108DS
Boondocking again. Now with a full-electric Tune M1 on a F150. No commercial campgrounds allowed.
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03-18-2024, 03:45 PM
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#22
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Winnebago Camper
Join Date: Feb 2024
Posts: 5
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2024 Micro Minnie 2108
With the great features they are advocating, i.e. holding tank heating pads and enclosed underbelly, why do they not have thermal windows and indicate the construction floor, wall and roof insulation?
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03-18-2024, 04:05 PM
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#23
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Site Team
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Spring Branch, TX
Posts: 8,390
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Cost? Weight? It’s not trying to be a “4-Seasons” travel trailer?
I’d guess those could be some of the reasons???
__________________
2017 Winnebago Adventurer 37F
2016 Lincoln MKX Toad
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03-18-2024, 04:10 PM
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#24
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Winnebago Camper
Join Date: Feb 2024
Posts: 5
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True, but why the heating pads and enclosed underbelly that I assume is heated? Just seems odd.
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03-18-2024, 04:18 PM
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#25
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Winnebago Owner
Join Date: Jan 2024
Posts: 147
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Quote:
Originally Posted by R.Yates
With the great features they are advocating, i.e. holding tank heating pads and enclosed underbelly, why do they not have thermal windows and indicate the construction floor, wall and roof insulation?
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Because both the "adventure" aspect and the "winter camping" aspect are nothing more than marketing, meant to attract the average person that doesn't know better.
I can tell you the floor is a sheet of vinyl, then 5/8" plywood. What's below that will vary depending on where you look: most of the trailer undercarriage will contain tanks and plumbing, which will be covered with a layer of reflectix-type bubble insulation, and then corrugated plastic. The very front section will be different, in that it only has a 1.5" air gap under the plywood, then the same bubble insulation and some sort of thin plastic-sheet as cover.
I recently had a chance to peek into a small ceiling cavity of my 2022 2108FBS, and saw some sort of soft, white insulation. Similar to fibreglass, but definitely not fibreglass. Of course, no vapor barrier over it.
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03-18-2024, 04:21 PM
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#26
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Winnebago Camper
Join Date: Feb 2024
Posts: 5
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Thanks. YEP marketing!!
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03-18-2024, 04:50 PM
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#27
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Winnebago Owner
Join Date: Oct 2020
Location: Asheville, NC
Posts: 1,714
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If you want all those goodies, trade in for an ORV or Northwoods.
Micro Minnie is what it is. Inexpensive and not particularly well designed or built, but maybe a bit better than others.
__________________
Jim. Former, 2021b Micro Minnie 2108DS
Boondocking again. Now with a full-electric Tune M1 on a F150. No commercial campgrounds allowed.
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03-18-2024, 04:54 PM
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#28
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Winnebago Owner
Join Date: Jan 2024
Posts: 147
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Yup, ORV and Northwood (Nash / Arctic Fox) will be better equipped on both counts, but still a far cry from ideal. I've looked at trailers from both, and didn't think they were worth the price difference vs. the Winnie I got. Both had plenty of standard issues that are found on all mass produced trailers.
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03-18-2024, 05:02 PM
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#29
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Winnebago Camper
Join Date: Feb 2024
Posts: 5
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Good point. You are correct in the price difference. Just have to make the best of it with the Micro Minnie. Thanks for the reply.
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03-30-2024, 10:14 AM
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#30
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Micro Traveler
Join Date: Feb 2024
Location: Northern Nevada
Posts: 46
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IMHO, Winnebago's "Towable" division seems to be towards the top of a very low pile!
As a now-retired 38-year licensed HVAC / electrical / plumbing contractor, I am amazed at MM's inferior construction. No good reason for sloppy and saving a dollar here or there? It's like Winnebago makes their towables to support their service dealer networks?
Then again, even at a published "MSRP" of ~$51,455 (2023 2108FBS w/Comfort, Convenience, Explorer, & Adventure packages), the MM is less expensive than Lance, and MUCH less than Air Stream ...
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03-30-2024, 10:29 AM
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#31
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Winnebago Owner
Join Date: Jan 2024
Posts: 147
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Jay Tea
IMHO, Winnebago's "Towable" division seems to be towards the top of a very low pile!
As a now-retired 38-year licensed HVAC / electrical / plumbing contractor, I am amazed at MM's inferior construction. No good reason for sloppy and saving a dollar here or there? It's like Winnebago makes their towables to support their service dealer networks?
Then again, even at a published "MSRP" of ~$51,455 (2023 2108FBS w/Comfort, Convenience, Explorer, & Adventure packages), the MM is less expensive than Lance, and MUCH less than Air Stream ...
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The reason is simple: people keep buying the junk. When people refuse to buy it, then quality might improve. IMO, paying anywhere near retail/MSRP for a Winnebago is absolutely insane.
Here's how the plastic rivets looked in my (brand new, never used) 2022 2108FBS' shower stall:
Can you imagine looking at that and thinking "yup, that's ready for delivery to the customer"?!
Of course, there is zero sealant of any sort behind any of the shower rivets. So any water that hits the rivets will instantly find its way behind the stall, and will start rotting away everything back there. Absolutely insane that this was acceptable from the factory.
I've replaced all rivets on my unit (with larger ones), sealing every hole and every rivet before assembly, sealed every shower surface, fixture, etc.
Suggest folks be very, very careful buying these trailers used if these preventative measures had not been done; chances are everything around the shower will be rotting.
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03-30-2024, 11:00 AM
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#32
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Winnebago Owner
Join Date: Oct 2020
Location: Asheville, NC
Posts: 1,714
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Ya gets what ya pays fer.
Junk, but a bit less junky than other brands.
__________________
Jim. Former, 2021b Micro Minnie 2108DS
Boondocking again. Now with a full-electric Tune M1 on a F150. No commercial campgrounds allowed.
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04-01-2024, 06:48 AM
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#33
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Winnebago Camper
Join Date: Aug 2023
Posts: 24
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Jay Tea
IMHO, Winnebago's "Towable" division seems to be towards the top of a very low pile!
As a now-retired 38-year licensed HVAC / electrical / plumbing contractor, I am amazed at MM's inferior construction. No good reason for sloppy and saving a dollar here or there? It's like Winnebago makes their towables to support their service dealer networks?
Then again, even at a published "MSRP" of ~$51,455 (2023 2108FBS w/Comfort, Convenience, Explorer, & Adventure packages), the MM is less expensive than Lance, and MUCH less than Air Stream ...
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Winnebago really needs to kick it up with QC. Maybe hire people that really care or fire them all and have a robotic machine build them (which I hate to see happening).
__________________
Too many toy's, not enough time!
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