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RV industry's recovery gains speed in 2012

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Attendees look at the all-electric E-Tahoe by MPV, at the Recreation Vehicle Industry Association's 2011 trade show in Louisville, Ky. (AP file)

LOUISVILLE, Ky. – The RV industry's recovery from the Great Recession has picked up speed.

Recreational ehicle makers are churning out higher numbers of travel trailers bound for dealers' lots and, ultimately, campgrounds.

Overall shipments from manufacturers to dealers — a key measure of consumer demand — are expected to rise 10 percent in 2012 and could gain another 4.5 percent next year, the Recreation Vehicle Industry Association said Tuesday.

Through September, shipments were up nearly 11 percent from the same period last year, the group said. The higher-than-expected number had dealers, manufacturers and suppliers feeling more optimistic as they gathered this week for an annual industry trade show.

At General RV Center in Huntley, operations manager Keith Lessner said sales are up over 2011.

"There's been huge growth from last year," Lessner said of the dealership, which has been open one and a half years.

He said a trend has been new units over used units. "You're getting a lot more for your money with a new unit," Lessner said.

"A 26-foot Prime Time Avenger bunk-bed unit sold for $13,000 10 years ago," he said. "It still sells for $13,000, and you're getting better construction, technology, better everything."

He said low interest rates have contributed to the popularity of new units.

"People are tired of being told not to spend money and starting to enjoy themselves," Lessner said.

"We made up a lot of ground this year," said Jeffrey Pastore, owner of Hartville RV Center in northeastern Ohio. "We're seeing a lot more buyers walking in the door, and we're seeing those buyers with more money in hand."

Sales at his dealership are up about 18 percent so far this year, and he's predicting another 15 percent gain in 2013. It's a big turnaround from 2009, when sales plunged 40 percent amid the country's worst economic downturn since the Great Depression.

"It was dreadful," said Tom Stinnett, an RV dealer in southern Indiana. "There were a lot of us wondering if we were going to make it."

Shipments to dealers slumped to 165,700 units in 2009 from 353,400 in 2007. Weak demand and evaporated credit left dealer lots clogged with RVs and forced the industry to lay off tens of thousands of workers. This year's shipments are expected to be better — hitting 277,300.

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