Sounds like the ethics of a loyal Democrat voter.
Just rent one. Don’t be that guy.
C’mon, don’t go out as a jerk.
It’s not the dealer’s fault you want a camper for free. He has a mortgage and kids to feed. What are you, a selfish moron? It’s all about you because you are at the end of the line?
It’s not so much a question of ethics as it is a choice of whether or not you’re going out as a known thief. Cheers!
To rent an RV for a couple months, you can use this amazing app on the Apple app store called, “Outdoorsy.” Here is the link:
https://apps.apple.com/us/app/outdoorsy-rent-an-rv/id1443835927
The downpayment would probably be more than the rental.
Look ar one way rental, many good deals doing reverse rv rental.
Alternatively, why stop at just EV. Max out credit cards applications and then party, go big.
Screwing over an RV dealer is what you will be remembered for when you’re gone.
That’s working the system in an unethical way. The ethical way would be to rent.
Why?
You already know the answer by asking. If I were that dealer and was having a bad day when finding out about this, I’d probably sue you broke for the fun of it. If I were connected, I’d get someone to do something a bit less legal. Is it worth taking the chance? Just rent it.
Consider “RV” an abbreviation for the Book of Revelations. :-)
Sounds pretty bad.
Would you be able to sleep at night after doing that?
Some friends bought RV, used it for couple of months, and then sold it.
They claimed, that it was cheaper than renting.
Well, it could be considered bank fraud.
And you DID leave a digital trail of pre-admission of guilt.
Depending if the finance company does their homework (they actually hire people to do this research) and which laws they can convince a DA or state AG to pursue, you might lose savings, title to property and more in the end.
And no, it’s not “ethical.”
What would your family think?
Your assets and income would be at risk if the dealer obtains a deficiency judgment. Stay with the rules and go out with honor.
Read the contract first. Not returning it is probably stealing it and you will end up in handcuffs and spend you last days and all of you money trying to avoid prison.
To all;
To rent is over $300 per DAY!
to purchase is down payment plus
$300 per month.
Who is the thief ??????
I just want to rent an RV and use it on the mainland for two months. That should not cost me $18,000 + dollars.
I live in Hawaii and can’t stick around on the mainland
to wait for a sale of an RV I bought and drove one way from Orlando to Seattle.
I’m not trying to cheat anybody, but I’m also
not pulling my pants down in a Gay bar.
Y’all get my drift?
What would your mom say about it?
I’m a landlord. I’d imagine the law works in a similar way. I don’t mean the specifics; I mean the general way. In some states a landlord, in this case, the RV dealer, is helpless. In others he can make your life a living Hell. You say you aren’t concerned about money. This means you have assets to go after. Depending on the law and the will of whoever holds the paper on our RV, which, BTW, won’t be the dealer, you could lose far more than you’re thinking. A big bank may have detectives, lawyers and other capabilities on staff. They hand over the case to them and go after everything they can find. If you anything else in your name, it may be as good as gone. You’ll end up hiring a lawyer at $500-1,000 per hour.
Your plan demonstrates you have zero understanding of how things work. The renters who get away with this sort of things know every quirk and corner of the law. You, obviously, don’t.