You walked onto the lot, saw the slick exterior and laminated sidewalls, and signed the loan. What nobody at the dealership told you is that three specific engineering decisions were made about your RV before it was ever built, and those three decisions are what cause new recreational vehicles to start coming apart somewhere between month thirty and month forty of ownership. This isn't a conspiracy theory. The warranty language is public. The fastener specifications are public. The class-action lawsuit against Lippert Components is a matter of public record. In this video, you'll learn how the ninety-day adjustment window, the twenty-two gauge fine-wire crown staple, and the Lippert frame combine into what the industry calls value engineering and what your wallet calls planned obsolescence. You'll see the calendar. You'll see the math. And by the end, you'll know exactly what to look for the next time you walk onto a dealer's lot. This is the blueprint that destroys your purchase in exactly thirty-six months. Now you know it exists. 00:00 The 36-Month Blueprint 01:00 What You Didn't See on the Lot 02:30 Decision One — The 90-Day Clock 06:45 Decision Two — The Staple Holding Your RV Together 08:30 Cabinet Failure and Sidewall Delamination 10:30 Why a Staple Instead of a Screw 11:30 Decision Three — Lippert and the Big Three 13:00 The Class Action and the NHTSA Record 15:00 The 36-Month Calendar 17:20 The Blueprint Only Works on Buyers Who Don't Know contact: [email protected] RV Decoder 2026 #rvbuyingtips #rv