Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Traveler 24 (Built on Mercedes Sprinter chassis with 3l diesel engine) A Class C motorhome is usually built on a modified truck chassis. These Holiday Rambler vehicles can carry as much as 29 US gallons (110 L) of water and 57 US gallons (220 L) of gasoline. When fully loaded, these vehicles can weigh as much as 14,000 pounds.
Two Class C motorhomes, built on (left) Freightliner Sprinter and (right) Ford E-Series chassis. Dethleffs alcove motorhome. Motorhomes usually have sleeping spaces for two to eight people. Each sleeping space is either fixed or converted from another part of the motorhome's interior, usually a fold-out sofa. A kitchenette area contains cooking ...
The Truck Surf Hotel, a two-story, five-room hotel built on a Mercedes Actros truck chassis. Constructed on either a truck chassis, a specially designed motor vehicle chassis, or a commercial bus chassis, a Class A motorhome resembles a bus in design and has a flat or vertical front end with large side windows. Slideouts on these vehicles may ...
This demo version, mated to an International 7300 extended-cab chassis, can hold 280 gallons of fuel — enough to go 2,500 miles on a tank, almost the entire length of the country.
Two Class C campervans, a Freightliner Sprinter (left) and Ford E-Series (right) chassis.. The term motorhome is sometimes used interchangeably with campervan, but the former can also be a larger vehicle than a campervan and intended to be more comfortable, whilst the latter is more concerned with ease of movement and lower cost.
Saf-T-Liner C2 Interior view, looking back. The Thomas Saf-T-Liner C2 (often shortened to Thomas C2) is a bus manufactured by Thomas Built Buses since 2004. The first cowled-chassis bus designed by Thomas following its acquisition by Freightliner, the C2 debuted the first all-new body design for the company in over three decades.
Freightliner entered school bus manufacturing as a chassis producer in May 1996, [15] unveiling the Freightliner FS-65 (derived from its FL60/FL70 Business Class medium-duty truck); developed in cooperation with Thomas, [2] [15] the first production Freightliner-chassis buses were produced at the beginning of 1997. [9]
GMC Motorhome early 1/8 scale clay model. Industry rumors had been circulating for some time that GM was going to build a motorhome. On February 7, 1972, it was made official. About this time the new vehicle was known as the TVS-4, Travel Vehicle Streamlined. The motorhome design continued to evolve in the two main areas of styling and chassis.