Gerry,
If you care to read this long tome it may be instructive regarding the '73 you're looking at.
My lovely wife and I have been using and loving an October/1973 coach since 1995. I have not had any major issues related to the year of manufacture. I don't know what your financial situation is or the span of your comfort zone, but both have an impact here. I paid $12K for my coach in '95 which in retrospect was probably high, but was all I could afford, yet there was nothing major wrong with it then and that situation remains. As a committed theatre person who thus condemned himself to a non-profit life, I do all my own work on the coach. Not as a hobby, but as a necessity.
I have dumped a lot of money in it over time, but on my schedule and on my whim. I started on running gear. Basic and cheap stuff first, timing chain, water pump, Pertronix ignition. It should be noted that I have an original 455 engine that had 140K on it when I purchased it. Skeptical of the brakes, I knew I'd be downshifting to slow down on long downhills so replaced the timing chain. Slight seepage on the water pump drove that replacement. By then I had discovered GMCMI and began to be familiar with marginal design decisions and common potential problems. Following their advice, but with no problems with the rear suspension, I worked with a machine shop and upgraded to JimK's larger bogie pins. I put Caspro shocks on it then as well. Around that time (2000) I replaced all the rubber belts, vacuum lines, fuel lines; what anyone prudent would do with a 30 year old vehicle. I had added, by this time, some 15K of my own miles on the vehicle.
Time passes, and with frequent use of the coach. A blown air bag caused me to order and install JimK's quad-bag suspension. Happy with that. Some time later, a potential trip to the mountains caused me to order and install JimK's six wheel disk brakes, master cylinder and sensitized booster. Again, not in response to a problem, but an incremental improvement to the coach in response to a potential need. Also happy with that. New Vair air pump, after rebuilding two original Dana's, buzz box replaced with modern, quiet charger, alloy wheels which expands access to available tires; all are incremental changes to a coach which has stranded me on the side of the road maybe three times in 25 years of ownership and frequent use.
There are documented benefits (posts above) in the post '75 coaches, which are favored by those lucky enough to afford them. But as they say in politics, there is more that unites us than divides us. That splendid collection of compromises which makes the GMC both a great driver as well as a comfortable sitter was there from the outset. As a long-time owner of an early coach I must note that most of my investments would benefit later coaches as well. When our financial status changed somewhat for the better awhile ago, I looked for a newer coach that I could afford. I was unsuccessful in my search by the time the need for disk brakes came up and that investment committed me to the '73 we bought in '95. It was an easy commitment to make.
So my advice is to evaluate the coach condition first, and weigh that well above year of manufacture. Sure I'd like a post '75 coach, but I don't suffer, and Wanabizo" ("He gets lost driving...", in Anishinabe Indian language) has become a beloved member of our family. YMMV
Doug