just wanted to share a new h5 60 pic with the group
just wanted to share a new h5 60 pic with the group
Help me here...It looks like a 35 foot bus with a matching trailer, so what's up with the twin steers?? I don't get it! I guess it could be a steerable tag behind the steer axle.
Last edited by dalej; 03-28-2008 at 08:46 PM.
Now that's a lot of bus.
Has any work been done on the interior yet? Would love to see some photos.
Mike
Man, thats a lot of tires! I wonder if Jon can get that backed up his driveway!
Gary & Lise Deinhard, 2003 Elegant Lady Liberty, Dbl slide
They could have at least painted the dome to match the bus ?
Gary S
I think that this is one of those setups for those of us who are sent to a distant bedrom for "snorring"
Wendy and Rick DeSilva
'08 Marathon H-3
2017 F350 platinum
Mahwah, NJ
Brant Beach, NJ
Pelican Lake, Fla
Let me suggest a name for that beast:
"The Mother-In Law Coach"
The coach has potential but I would like to see more on the mechanicals. Critical questions in my mind would be what engine? What is the parts availability for the specialized components around the joint? What would the house configuration be and how are the systems going to deal with the joint?
Gary was kidding, but I would love to see how that handles the transition from the road to the upslope on my driveway, and the transition from the slope to the garage floor. The angles are extreme.
It is still a 20 year old shell, and if it has the 8V92 there is going to be some resistance to it. The black paint is probably going to be part of the overall plan to make its appearance appeal to folks that want an attention getter, but I see that coach as being a serious problem to develop. Six house AC units, huge campground power management problems due to the required power, Lots of batteries and a power management system to deal with the equvalent of 1 1/2 times the bus we all now have.
If this is an old H3-60 built back in the late eighties, they had an 8V-92 engine mounted ahead of the drive wheels. Access to it would be difficult at best. Maybe a trap door in the floor, wow, we all like mechanics working on the engine from the salon. And the engine takes up a good chunk of what we have for bay storage. Add the second steer axle and you lose some more.
OK, you gain some back in the back half. It would probably weigh 70,000 pounds so the acceleration would be poorer.
Oh, now hang a tow car behind there, or better yet a stacker trailer, and then you would really have something!
That is the old H3-60. I think the coach is going to be an attention getter like a stretched Hummer limo, but I just do not see it for this market.
It'll likely have a hot tub and fancy disco lighting, but I just don't see the usual conversion owner rushing out to buy one.