Our Tiger was only two builds away from this one, so they are a similar generation. Like this one, we have the 400 watts of solar and 2 100 Ah lithium batteries. More power than we could ever use.
The oven is an option we skipped to have extra storage. We are still on the fence as to whether that was a good call or not. The oven does come with a 3 burner stove top. Otherwise you get a 2 burner. We left off the microwave, generator, TV, AC, and stereo. We typically go for 10 days and the fridge does hold all we need for that.
I believe the fresh water tank is 33 gallons and the hot water is 4 gallons, for a total of 37. The standard tank monitors are very inaccurate. After we dump all tanks the black tank reads 35% full. I highly recommend upgrades on those.
The bathroom is cramped. Some WTW members have left the sink out for more room. We aren't big people but I could see doing that in hindsight. Edit: Mrs. Ted says she prefers having it and would not leave it off.
As to the bed, Occidentals description is pretty accurate. Bed is fine but not much headroom, east west setup, froli system is standard, ladder can be awkward. To be honest, because of my health issues I sleep on the fold out couch while Mrs. Ted sleeps in the upper bunk. So I have only napped up there a few times.
Wish we had known about the Lagun table option. We will definitely be modifying to that.
Base cost is about $92k after you provide the vehicle. We were credited for not including the normally standard generator, AC, TV, microwave, and radio. But we added more than that in options. So our build, including a brand new F350 XLT with 7.3L gas engine was right about $150k. Picking it up vs shipping and your state's taxes will vary for costs above and beyond that.
Occidental said they are looking into retirement vehicles. After 18 years in FWCs while working, this is what we chose for our retirement vehicle. We spend at least 10 nights a month in it. We like the open layout, good vehicle clearance for off road, pass through, and storage. Mrs. Ted does 99% of the driving and it is a small enough Class C that she can handle comfortably.
And if you think people ask a lot about your FWC or ATC when they see it, you have no idea. Get ready for constant questions, tours, comments, etc at gas stations, campgrounds, even at home.