RV Wreck

If anyone needs a reason for a skoolie conversion rather than buying an RV.

Found this link on the BCM site:News

What that makes the case for is having a TRAILER and tow it with a TRUCK.

Here is one of many videos that show the very heavy steel roof makes the schoolbus top heavy so they tip over more easily.

 
What that makes the case for is having a TRAILER and tow it with a TRUCK.

Here is one of many videos that show the very heavy steel roof makes the schoolbus top heavy so they tip over more easily.


And do you feel that in that situation a camper/truck arrangement wouldn't have skidded on the ice?

Do you know what happens when trucks with trailers skid on ice or snow? They jack knife.

Have you ever seen the damage of a truck/trailer combo jack knife? It isn't pretty, and I see more of them every year then I do school bus rollovers from them being top heavy.
 
Good grief.



That video shows the tires regaining traction while moving nearly perpendicular to the road. The driver hit the curb. I don't see how _any_ RV escapes a roll in that condition, not to mention there is _a lot_ more steel/weight at the bottom of the cabin that at the top of a school bus. If the argument is that an RV wouldn't have rolled, convince yourself before you try convincing others.



There are merits to box trucks and prebuilt RVs for sure, this video is not illustrative of those merits. There are also merits to buses- fairly confident I'm going to be the one having the better day during severe weather in an RV park or boondocking. Fiberglass and balsa wood versus steel. A chassis thousands of pounds under GVWR after conversion, or one loaded up to the limit from the factory. The steel base of a skoolie is its _number one merit_ for many.



OP, was there really a need to bring this into its own thread?
 
Most RVs are wooden framed structures with luan and fiberglass skins built into a steel truck frame. Even with all the living spaces and conveniences installed I don't think the issue with RVs versus school buses is being more top-heavy. So I'm not inclined to say an RV is a bigger rollover risk because of its construction but rather the most prominent factor is likely a combination of lack of experience with large vehicles combined with lack of situational awareness. RV owners are exempt from all the qualifications required of professional drivers yet they are operating essentially the very same class of vehicle and all it takes to get behind the wheel of one is good credit or a lot of cash up front. So they hit the road, get comfy, set the cruise control and BAM! Statistically this happens more frequently with RVs because they're far more prevalent than skoolies. I've always been a little curious whether a school bus gutted and modified and converted into a skoolie is actually still as resilient as an unmodified school bus.
 
Were there any kids in that bus... The way that bus turned over would have them all smashed at the ceiling.. unless they had seat belts... Also that bus went pretty fast imho. Maybe the driver was certified, qualified is something else. Vehicles in those weight classes should not go over 55MPH another beautiful example of $$ against lives.


Johan
 

Try RV LIFE Pro Free for 7 Days

  • New Ad-Free experience on this RV LIFE Community.
  • Plan the best RV Safe travel with RV LIFE Trip Wizard.
  • Navigate with our RV Safe GPS mobile app.
  • and much more...
Try RV LIFE Pro Today
Back
Top