The quality of most newer RV's has suffered due to the dramatic increase in people buying them. They are being slammed together at a record pace. Quantity is more important than quality as a rule now. Being that it is a 2017, if there were any major flaws that needed to be addressed the current or previous owners have had plenty of time to get them fixed. That being said you still need to do a thorough walk through and check all systems before making an offer. I would highly recommend paying a trained RV inspector to do this for you. Also, ask for maintenance records. If there are none that is a good indication they have not been talking good care of the RV. Feel free to walk away at any time. Trust me, there are a LOT of used RV's out there for sale.
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