Hi, I'm looking at buying a Cheyanne 840 D. Having seen one today, one point that interests me is the spongy floor when you stand in front of the galley area. No other part of the floor is 'soft'. The sceptic in me wonders if there are any other Autotrail members that may have come across this before. Any help appreciated. Cheers Paul
Run a mile! Spongy floor usually means the floor underneath is delaminated. I had a Swift Suntor and this happened to me. A costly repair bill ensued. You need to actually lie under the van and press up. If it's spongy from there, I wouldn't touch it with a barge poll! Sorry....
same here I had to carry out extensive repair to my autotrail Cherokee years ago, although it does sound daunting, its by no means beyond the scope of any one that knows what is involved and how to do it, read up on it and decide, but remember you have an ace up your sleeve regarding the price of the motorhome if you get my drift.
Many thanks wineciccio and alpiner. I did some more research last night and it concurs with your comments. The dealer was very helpful with indicating the domestic work would be done. Even if the floor was repaired, it would always sit uneasy in the back of my mind. Cheers
Well having just repaired the floor on my 07 Compass, it's not too hard of a job to repair yourself,the most daunting part is drilling the first hole in the floor (87 in total on mine) There are several good video's on utube explaining how to do the job, dealer quoted £1000 to repair, it cost me using the same stuff as them £19.95 the video above shows how easy it is to do
I had the same problems on my Autotrail Cheyenne. Sounds as if Autotrail don't know how to build floors as I haven't had this problem on any other make of van.
------------- Two drifters off to see the world.
I'm tired of reality, so I'm off to look for a good fantasy.
Okay, it could be "repaired" ..folk seem to be assuming it's only delamination..but that is not a certainty...it could always be as rotten as a pear and needs a new section of floor letting in...?
Repairing, patching, making-good something that you already own is one thing...but buying something which is known to require "repairing", to an as yet unknown degree, is a totally different prospect...
With any MH(used or new)there w'll be enough things that'll need fixing/sorting/tweaking from time to time as it is, without going out looking for them....
Agree pepe63. Worked in the leisure industry before and without generalising too much, yes it could be repaired. However to what extent and how long would it last, no one knows.
Looked at a bessacar a few months ago. Had a damp served done and it was riddled. The Lunar iI recently sold had a little damp too, even tho I took great care by putting 2 x tube heaters in it all year around. That went back to Lunar to be rectified. Great after sales service. Whichever van I lend up buying this time around, I'll be sure to use the C&C Clubs new service for inspecting a van. Many thanks for everyone's input. All we need now is for summer to arrive 😄