Don is still at the factory heading up the tours.
GCroyle, your welcome to stop by the house on the way to the factory - we offer courtesy parking for fellow Airstreamers.
While I always admired them as a "classy" and well built unit, I have looked at them and they are not for me. No disrespect intended to anyone who owns one, but I find them too "cold and commercial". Like an industrial loft condo or an airplane. Just not my style. I also don't like most of the RV's made today, too much "fluff". Shad
About ten years ago I noticed a vintage Airstream in a farmer's field south of Lubbock. I knocked on the door and talked with the old retired farmer who owned it. He offered to show it to me so we walked out and looked it over. It was a '66 Airstream 22' Safari single axle. The body was not damaged and the trailer was complete - still had the television post and antenna, heat shield on outside of furnace, etc. It was missing several windows and full of farm dirt and rat droppings. I was interested but not willing to pay for it so thanked him and moved on. A couple weeks later I called him back and asked if he was interested in trading me the trailer for my labor to install a metal roof on his dilapidated old farm house. He was delighted so we made a deal. I brought the trailer home and put it in my shop building and did a mechanical restoration. Replaced wheel bearings, seals, backing plates, brakes, tires, and repainted wheels. Replaced all the plumbing, clearance lights, taillights, and windows. I stopped working on it when I went on the road transporting trailers and it sat in my shop for a couple of years.
My daughter remarried and I gave it to her as a wedding present. She and her husband had it professionally reupholstered and new carpet, drapes, formica, floor tile, furnace, refrigerator, and ac installed and had a specialty company in northern OH strip and polish the exterior. It looks like a museum piece now but hasn't been used once. Her husband is not interested in the RVing lifestyle and she won't sell it so it has been stored inside for years. I estimate its probably worth $30 - $40k to a vintage Airstream enthusiast.
I acquired a used 1979 back in 1987. In the owners manual that came with there was a system described that attached to the car/tow vehicle exhaust that disposed of the waste from the trailer while you were driving down the road. Anyone ever see one of these? bg
We are currently on our third Airstream. I have enjoyed tinkering with them in my spare time and all the money I have spent on refurbishing them has been recouped in the selling price to get a different model as my family/needs have changed.
Here is a picture of our first trailer, an ebay special... ..... I learned a lot about this trailer as I installed new floors, appliances, interior refurbishment etc..... , I liked it a lot since it was our first but the floor plan wasn't the greatest after our daughter was born.
Trailer #1 - 1981 Excella II - 22'
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Trailer #2 - 1989 Excella - 29' - was neglected, rotten floors etc... ... Except for 1 dented panel it was pretty darn nice when I was done. It was sold because my wife like the floor plan in trailer #3.
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Trailer #3 - 1994 Excella - 30' - some areas are needing attention since the previous couple were getting elderly and letting a few things go. We really like this trailer and I hope to keep this one for quite awhile. I already fixed a structural issue along with the typical rv maintenance issues.
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Here is a link to the structural work I did this past fall.
http://www.airforums.com/forums/f381/hold-down-plate-panel-replacement-pic-heavy-98728.html
I would love to see pictures of it!
I would love to see pictures of it!