Buying & Selling · Pinned by Camp Host

Retired and went full-time in a used Class A off harberts

Fulltimer_Linda
11 replies
5,640 views
Oct 14, 2025
harbertsautosales.com class a diesel pusher full time rv snowbird thor palazzo cummins 6.7
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ok so my husband and i finally pulled the trigger on the thing we have been talking about for fifteen years. he retired from teaching in may, i was already out two years before him, and we decided we are not going to sit in this house in Tulsa and watch the seasons go by anymore. we sold it. closed in early September. and now we live in a motorhome. still feels strange to type that.

figuring out WHAT to buy was the part that gave me a stomach ache for about three months. new Class A diesel pushers are insane money right now, like the nice ones are pushing past what we paid for our first house, and we are living on a pension and social security plus what came out of the sale. so new was never realistic. we went round and round on travel trailer vs fifth wheel vs Class A and landed on a diesel pusher because Ken (the husband) wanted the basement storage and the ride quality for long days, and honestly after one test drive of a gas Class A on the highway in a crosswind i agreed with him real fast.

used was the answer but the used market is a minefield. private sellers who get cagey when you ask for service records, dealers who mark a five year old coach up like it is brand new. we looked for weeks. our son in law is the one who found harbertsautosales.com, he buys work trucks off auction and said look at this place in Waco they do everything online and they ship.

so the coach. 2019 Thor Palazzo 33.5, Cummins 6.7 on a Freightliner chassis, 31k miles. one owner trade, not a repo, full maintenance binder. two slides, residential fridge, the layout we wanted with the bath and a half. the price made me actually call harberts to ask if it was a typo. it was about 34 thousand under what the same year and floorplan was listed for at two RV dealerships we had walked.

i was nervous buying a coach sight unseen but the guy at harbert's auto sales sent us a video walkaround that was like 25 minutes long, he climbed up on the roof and showed the sealant, opened every bay, ran the genset, extended both slides, started it cold. did not feel like a sales pitch. he even pointed out a scuff on the front cap and a slide topper that was getting sun faded. we had it shipped to a transport yard outside Tulsa for 900 bucks and it showed up exactly like the video.

we have been on the road since October heading south for the winter. i will report back. but i wanted to write this up because when i was searching for full timer advice on buying used i could not find a single honest first hand account of going through an online auction lot, just sales fluff. so here is mine.

the 6.7 on the freightliner chassis is a great combo for what you two are doing, that drivetrain will go forever if you keep up on the fuel filters and do not let it sit idling for hours on end. 31k miles on a 2019 is basically a new coach, you got the depreciation hit somebody else already ate. smart buy.

one thing for a 33 footer that age, get up on the roof yourself or pay a shop 150 bucks to inspect and reseal the seams before your first real rainy stretch. not because anything is wrong, just because roof sealant is the one thing that quietly fails on every coach and a tube of self leveling lap sealant is the cheapest insurance in this hobby. sounds like the harberts guy already showed you the roof so you are probably fine, but check it every fall.

congrats. the palazzo 33.5 is a really livable floorplan for a couple.

welcome to the lifestyle. we have been full time since 2019 and bought our coach used too, sight unseen sounds scary but a good video walkaround tells you more than ten minutes wandering a dealer lot does. the fact that the harberts guy pointed out the scuff and the faded topper without you asking is the tell. honest sellers volunteer the small stuff. the ones who hide it are the ones you run from.

we mostly boondock on BLM land out here in the arizona desert in the winter so if your travels bring you through quartzsite in january come find us, theres a whole city of full timers that pops up out of nothing. you will learn more in a week parked next to old timers than a year of reading forums, no offense to this place.

solar and a decent battery bank is the upgrade i would prioritize once you settle in. opens up a lot of free camping.

linda where are you headed for the winter? if you are doing the southern route through arizona text me which parks you are eyeing because some of the snowbird parks in the phoenix mesa area book up by august for the good winter months. if you are more of a first come first served boondocker like greg ignore me, but if you want full hookups and a heated pool the popular 55 plus parks fill fast.

we did the same thing you did three years ago, sold the house in minnesota and never looked back. first winter we just kept moving and chasing 70 degrees. now we settle in one spot near mesa december through march and travel the rest of the year. you find your rhythm.

as someone who hosts a park in the winter i see a LOT of first year full timers and the ones who bought used and sensible are way happier than the ones who stretched for a brand new rig. i cannot tell you how many shiny new coaches roll in here with the owners stressed about the payment. you two did it right. paid cash, bought below market, kept your nest egg intact. that peace of mind is worth more than the new car smell.

one practical thing from the host chair. when you check into a park, ask if they have monthly rates, the difference between nightly and monthly can be hundreds of dollars and a lot of snowbird parks do not advertise the monthly deal up front. and bring a good surge protector with an EMS, the power pedestals in some of these older parks are rough on electronics.

good luck out there. you picked a good time of year to start heading south.

good on you for buying within your means. too many folks finance a brand new 300k coach to find out the lifestyle isnt for them and then they are upside down on a depreciating box for years. i have been at this since 2014 and i have watched it happen over and over.

used diesel pusher in the 30 to 40k range with low miles is the sweet spot for a first full time rig in my opinion. you avoided the worst of the depreciation curve, the coach is already broken in, and if you decide in two years this isnt for you, you can sell it for close to what you paid. cannot do that with new.

i havent bought through harberts myself but a couple folks i camp with have bought rigs off auction lots and the story is always the same, way less money, do your homework on the specific unit, get a good walkaround. the savings are real if you go in with eyes open. enjoy the road.

quick update from a KOA just outside Tucson, we made it this far and the coach has been wonderful on the road. one honest thing to report so this stays a fair review.

the bedroom slide was hesitating to come in and out, would judder and stop partway. i was sick about it for a day thinking we bought a lemon. turns out it was the slide topper awning that had gotten sun faded, the exact one the harberts guy pointed out in the video, the fabric had stiffened on one edge and was binding the slide. a mobile RV tech met us at the campground, swapped the topper fabric, lubed the slide rails, and we were done in under two hours. 240 bucks all in including the part. he said it is the most common thing he fixes on coaches that have sat in the sun.

DieselPusherKen wrote
get up on the roof yourself or pay a shop 150 bucks to inspect and reseal the seams before your first real rainy stretch

ken i did exactly this, had the tech check the roof while he was here since he had the ladder out. sealant was in good shape, he touched up two small spots and called it good. so glad i did not wait. thank you.

heading to Marie next, where do we even start with finding a winter spot, my inbox is open.

that slide topper sticking is so common, glad it was cheap. did harberts do anything on the title and registration side or did you handle all of that yourself? we are not full time yet, just weekend warriors right now in a small travel trailer, but we are starting to dream about something bigger and i keep hearing about buying off auction lots to save money. the title part is the thing that scares my husband, he thinks it will be a paperwork nightmare buying out of state.

SiteHookupNancy wrote
did harberts do anything on the title and registration side or did you handle all of that yourself?

nancy the title was honestly the part i worried about most and it turned out to be the easiest. since this was a clean trade in and not a repo, the title was already in hand at the waco lot. harberts overnighted us the signed title and a bill of sale, and they sent a temporary trip permit so we could legally drive it home before we registered it. we took that paperwork to the tag office back in oklahoma and registered it like any other out of state purchase. one trip, done in an afternoon.

tell your husband the out of state part is not the monster he thinks it is. the only thing i would say is ask up front whether the title is in hand before you pay, that is the question that matters. a repo can take longer because of the lien release, but a clean trade like ours was quick. the harberts online auction listing actually noted the title status right on the page which i appreciated.

and honestly, start with a bigger travel trailer before you jump to a motorhome if you are not sure. nothing wrong with working up to it.

this is the exact thread i needed, found it searching harberts reviews on google. my wife and i retire next spring and we are torn between a travel trailer and a class A. can i ask what made you go diesel pusher over a fifth wheel? we already have a 3/4 ton truck so a fifth wheel would save us buying a separate tow rig, but the idea of just getting in and driving the motorhome appeals to my wife who does not love backing a trailer.

also did you tow a car behind the coach? thats the part i cant picture, how do you get around once you are parked at a campground if your whole house is the vehicle.

joe to answer your toad question, yes almost everybody towing a class A pulls a small car flat behind it, we call it a toad or a dinghy. jeep wranglers and small SUVs that can be towed four down are the favorites. you unhook it at the campground and run to the grocery store in that instead of breaking camp every time you need milk. it is the main practical advantage a fifth wheel has, with a fifth wheel your truck is already your runabout. both setups work, it comes down to whether your wife wants to drive a coach or back a trailer, which it sounds like she already answered.

linda, checking back in, hope the season has been good. the cold snap in the new mexico high desert hit us too, ran the heat pumps down to about 30 then switched to the furnace below that. how is the palazzo holding heat?

Updateafter a full snowbird season, we are back up in oklahoma visiting the grandkids for the summer and i wanted to close the loop on this one.

best decision we have made in twenty years. we wintered near Mesa for two months on Marie's advice (thank you, the monthly rate tip alone saved us a fortune), then wandered through the arizona desert, spent three weeks near Quartzsite where we did finally meet Greg and his wife around a fire, and slow rolled home through new mexico and the texas hill country. about 6,300 miles total on the coach.

the palazzo held heat beautifully Ken, even in the high desert cold the furnace kept us toasty and the basement stayed above freezing. fuel mileage settled in around 8.5 to 9 mpg loaded which for a 33 foot diesel pusher i am told is right on the money. since the slide topper fix in november the coach has not needed a single thing other than routine oil and filters. we towed a little jeep the whole way and Ken was right, it is the way to do it.

total spent on the coach plus the one repair is still tens of thousands under what a comparable new or even dealer used unit would have cost us, and we own it free and clear. for anyone reading this on the fence about buying a used coach off an online auction lot like harberts, my honest take after a full season is do your homework on the specific rig, ask for the long video, confirm the title is in hand, and the savings are real. we are already looking at their listings for friends.

see everybody down south next winter. the road is good.

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