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no, your 233S is superior to this floor plan for several reasons. your U shape dinette is a large bed when needed. The sofa in yours is much better. And yours has the third bedroom. The thing this floor plan has over yours is the entertainment center with the fireplace and the outside kitchen if you like those (I don't and have had them).
This was a great video - one of the best fluent reviewers i have listened to on here. What are your thoughts on the 23FL? I like the opposing slides and open layout much better than this.
I believe each model is built with a different person in mind, but I personally struggle with the concept of the 23FL. If I was going to get something with opposing slides like that, then I wouldn't be getting a hybrid. It feels like a square peg in a round hole to me. But that's EXACTLY why we carry so many models from so many brands -- we can't find the one everyone agrees upon!
Is that there a Roo with a slide out on the rear end housing a queen-size bed and a fabric fold out on the tongue end housing of a queen size bed with one or two slide out?
In the case of MOST Rockwood Roo models the interior TV is designed to dismount for exterior use. As a result the exterior mount is a standardized feature. In the case of models like this where the TV Swings out the TV doesn't dismount in the same way. You'd want to get a 2nd TV.
2509S: Change to capital grill which is physically larger and used up the room for a sink. Included the sprayer port which can utilize residential garden hose handles (which is actually pretty slick for campsite cleanups)
@@JoshtheRVNerdsorry for the questions on the grill in the 2509s do you know if there's any griddle insert that you can get for the grill. Or even regular burners for using frying pans or pots
@@matthewsshowalter2025 Not to my knowledge, but that's getting down to some pretty specific inquiries on an accessory. Our parts guys might be a better source for information there.
The methods you've described are one in the same. There's more than one way to laminate a wall. The two most common methods are pinch rolling and vacuum laminating (not vacuum sealing by the way). Rockwoods are laminated. They happen to be vacuum laminated. Does that help?
I don't know. he used a prop which was part of the wall. the way he described the procedure and the end result was much more durable than how you described the process and the end result. Maybe it was the where he done it and describe it to get his point across. I will say that when I buy my RV it will be a Rockwood Roo. That little RV has more space than I've ever seen in an RV that size. it totally fits my needs to the T.
@@rehtracam I've done this for a while. I've seen plenty of RVs using both methods of lamination. I also have the benefit of seeing service records over a decade of RV exposure & how each method holds up. I can say based on years of evidence it's not the style of lamination that matters, but rather the humidity control during the lamination process. If the glue is allowed the opportunity to cure properly, then the wall will hold well. That's really the single most important factor in lamination.