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07-01-2020, 02:41 PM
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#21
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Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2018
Location: Oceanside
Posts: 229
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Just a ‘me three’ on the alignment. We have a 2018.5 Seneca 37K. I haven’t added any suspension modifications whatsoever. Previously owned a E-450 Ford Chassis Thor Dutchman. Before any mods thought the C drove like a hog on roller skates. Trying pass at around 70 was a real “pay attention stupid” moment, lots of work. Crosswinds were no fun. Added front and rear antisway bar from Helwig, Koni Shocks all around and this made things tolerable when driving. Night and day difference with the Seneca. I am sure that I give Class C’s the “bow wave” now when passing. I haven’t added the Saf-T-Plus at this time. A 400 mile day in a regular C was a lot of work. 400 miles in a Seneca is pretty relaxing.
__________________
Gary & Jean
2018.5 Seneca
2021 Jeep Wrangler Rubicon 4xe - Ready Brute
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07-01-2020, 03:29 PM
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#22
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Lost in the Woods
Join Date: Apr 2019
Location: Ocean County
Posts: 2,807
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Gunfighter
Crosswinds were no fun. Added front and rear antisway bar from Helwig, Koni Shocks all around and this made things tolerable when driving. Night and day difference with the Seneca. I am sure that I give Class C’s the “bow wave” now when passing. I haven’t added the Saf-T-Plus at this time. A 400 mile day in a regular C was a lot of work. 400 miles in a Seneca is pretty relaxing.
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Wonder if a 14K weight versus a 22K weight makes any difference...
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07-01-2020, 05:02 PM
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#23
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Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2018
Location: Oceanside
Posts: 229
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Oh Yah
Quote:
Originally Posted by RetiredOne
Wonder if a 14K weight versus a 22K weight makes any difference...
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For sure and I think the Seneca GVWR lists at 29000.
__________________
Gary & Jean
2018.5 Seneca
2021 Jeep Wrangler Rubicon 4xe - Ready Brute
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07-01-2020, 06:35 PM
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#24
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Member
Join Date: Jan 2020
Location: Grifton
Posts: 53
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Had a couple of class c on e450 chassis and have to say the accolade is way better ride. Had the alignment done and can't be happier, might do some modifications down the road .
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07-01-2020, 07:34 PM
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#25
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Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2019
Location: Longs
Posts: 1,484
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In the past 11 years we had a Class C on an E450 chassis and a Class A on an F 53. We now have the Accolade on the Freightliner. After our test drive and prior to the PDI I had the dealer get the coach aligned. The handling between the different units is night and day. With the Accolade I do not feel the need to make any suspension mods and IMHO it handles fine the way it is.
Someone else mentioned the difference in levels of fatigue after a day of travel and I totally agree. With the Class C and Class A I would limit my travel day to 300 miles max and I would need a rest stop every hour. With the Accolade 400 miles is a relatively easy day and I have to force myself to stop and stretch every 2 hours.
Definitely glad we went the Super C route this time around.
__________________
Dave
US Army (Ret)
2020 Entegra Accolade 37TS
2019 Jeep Grand Cherokee Trailhawk TOAD
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07-01-2020, 07:50 PM
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#26
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Member
Join Date: Jan 2020
Location: Grifton
Posts: 53
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Quote:
Originally Posted by EA37TS
In the past 11 years we had a Class C on an E450 chassis and a Class A on an F 53. We now have the Accolade on the Freightliner. After our test drive and prior to the PDI I had the dealer get the coach aligned. The handling between the different units is night and day. With the Accolade I do not feel the need to make any suspension mods and IMHO it handles fine the way it is.
Someone else mentioned the difference in levels of fatigue after a day of travel and I totally agree. With the Class C and Class A I would limit my travel day to 300 miles max and I would need a rest stop every hour. With the Accolade 400 miles is a relatively easy day and I have to force myself to stop and stretch every 2 hours.
Definitely glad we went the Super C route this time around.
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With the other RV's the wife would get up and leave me alone in the cap, now she stays in front and keeps me company.
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07-01-2020, 09:06 PM
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#27
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Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2016
Location: Kingman AZ and where our Seneca is today.
Posts: 3,121
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Quote:
Originally Posted by EA37TS
In the past 11 years we had a Class C on an E450 chassis and a Class A on an F 53. We now have the Accolade on the Freightliner. After our test drive and prior to the PDI I had the dealer get the coach aligned. The handling between the different units is night and day. With the Accolade I do not feel the need to make any suspension mods and IMHO it handles fine the way it is.
Someone else mentioned the difference in levels of fatigue after a day of travel and I totally agree. With the Class C and Class A I would limit my travel day to 300 miles max and I would need a rest stop every hour. With the Accolade 400 miles is a relatively easy day and I have to force myself to stop and stretch every 2 hours.
Definitely glad we went the Super C route this time around.
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We have gone more than 400, but we are always pulling a trailer and I adhear to our company philosophy where we do a trip check 2x or 3x a day.
Quote:
Originally Posted by jack4540
With the other RV's the wife would get up and leave me alone in the cap, now she stays in front and keeps me company.
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If I turn the stereo up (bluetooth content) in the cab, Stacy will be dozing off after the first 150 miles.
__________________
Steve & Stacy with Jasper (Australian Cattle dog)
2015 Seneca 36FK
Custom 27' flatbed trailer hauling:
07 Toyota FJC & Yamaha Kodiak 400 ATV
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07-04-2020, 01:00 AM
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#28
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Member
Join Date: Nov 2018
Location: Phoenix
Posts: 88
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Our 2014 Seneca 37FS is our first rig. We looked for over a year and we thought Class A was the way to go. We then found the Seneca and I fell in love with almost everything about it. DW loved the interior layout as well and the fact we had useable space with slides closed, unlike most of the class A DPs we looked at.
Before we bought the Seneca, we rented a Redhawk 31XL and drove it almost 1,500 miles. It was my first time really driving an RV for serious use. While I was impressed with the V10, I hated fighting it driving down the highway every time anything bigger than a large SUV passed me. I didn’t have the Grand Cherokee at the time but don’t think I’d be as comfortable towing it up and down our 6% grades with the redhawk.
With the Seneca, we’ve done no suspension mods and I absolutely LOVE driving it. It tows the Cherokee up the hills in the heat with ease and doesn’t get blown around by its older brother Freightliners passing me on the interstate. Going down the grades with the exhaust brake on, I rarely touch the brakes to maintain 55-60 MPH. Agree on stamina - I can run 400 miles in a day and don’t feel beat up at all.
__________________
2014 Seneca 37FS
2017 Jeep Grand Cherokee Limited
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07-04-2020, 04:39 AM
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#29
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2017
Location: Manchester Center
Posts: 1,519
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I installed the safe t plus unit on my m2. It took about a half hour to install and another half hour to adjust.
I did this for the blow out assistance not for any other reason as I felt the unit drove well before. I did notice that it reduced slight steering adjustments and the unit tracks straight.
As much as i try not to, sometimes In construction zones I get too close to the shoulder and drop off the edge. Before I had the unit it would suck the rig over further onto the shoulder and I had to counter that motion. Now when this happens I barely notice it and simply steer back on to the travel portion of the road.
__________________
Paul
2018 37TS
Jeep JL
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