Congratulations. Even shopping is fun. In addition to checking everything look VERY closely for evidence of water intrusion. Check the interior sidewalls for small hard “pimples” and look around the base of the slides. Go up on the roof on your hands and knees and look for failed sealing around the edges and all protrusions. Look for service records. Don’t worry if manuals are missing. Generally they are not very helpful and are easily accessible online anyway. Check the manufacture dates on the tires. If they are original they may be 5 years old and many folks think 5-6 years is about max for RV tires even if the tread is still good. It might be a negotiating point, at least. Since you’ve owned other RVs you probably know most of the pitfalls. Good luck and let us know how it goes.
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