That is actually a pretty low price for a Class B that outwardly appears to be in good condition, and with only 54k miles.<br /><br />It would make me suspicious that something major was wrong with it, like the transmission, or it smells like the black tank and a dead rat combined.<br /><br />It should have the A 518 overdrive transmission which are pretty beefy but are pretty highly stressed in such a heavy vehicle that has the aerodynamics of a barn door. <br /><br /> If the transmission was ever serviced, by a non dodge dealer, it is likely they did not use the correct fluid which is atf+4. Any other tranny fluid will cause major issues within 10k miles, if not instantly. Tranny shops boost their bottom line by using their bulk/ universal transmission fluid in everything and add a friction modifier that supposedly brings it up to the right specs. This does not work with ATF+4, which is an expensive synthetic high quality transmission fluid. Bulk Dexron with a friction modifier does not work and any shop that says it does is dishonest.<br /><br />But even if you have to put another 2 k$ into a rebuilt transmission, it is a pretty good price, if the generator and AC unit and fridge and plumbing actually work.<br /><br />The reports scary wandering on the highway are true and many claim to have remedied them by wheel spacers on the rear axle, Bilstein shocks, stepping up a load range on the tires, and a proper alignment from a reputable truck shop, not a 50$ coupon special you found in the paper.<br /><br />In my experience the steering stabilizer does little except reduce bump steer, but I have an earlier dodge with a badly remanufactured (loose) steering gear, but a freshly rebuilt suspension with new beefier coil springs and rear air bags.