I am beginning to think that putting a small house on a truck might not make as much sense as getting a toy hauler and modifying to suit.
I assume tent trailers are out the question?
I am beginning to think that putting a small house on a truck might not make as much sense as getting a toy hauler and modifying to suit.
I am beginning to think that putting a small house on a truck might not make as much sense as getting a toy hauler and modifying to suit.
I run a 8' pop-up camper on an 2010 F-150 4x4 extended cab with 8' bed. This allows me to pull a 12' enclosed trailer with quad and other gear for moose camp. The pop-up has lower wind drag and clearance for bush roads. Had to bend u-channel risers for the camper to clear the higher bed sides on truck. Runs Ok but rear air lifts would be good idea to keep lights from aiming too high.
I've lost count over the years as to how many camper trailers I've seen missing a hub (or two) on the side of the highway. Not just in Canada, but all over the States, too. Just this last week in Saskabush I saw a Uhaul that lost a hub, and then I think the driver panicked, and put the whole shebang on its side on the shoulder. I don't think anybody was hurt, but I'm betting the seat cushions took a sh!t kicking when all the excitement went down.
It's a tradeoff when it comes to trailers. More room for extra stuff vs less insurance and maintenance hassles. Buying a trailer for a once a year activity is a very expensive proposition. If you can use it for other things during the year then it's easier to justify.
Lately I've been seeing 5th wheel campers with a boat being towed behind the camper. I know it's illegal in BC, and I haven't seen one of those rigs in the ditch, yet, but I wonder how strong the frame of those 5th wheels are whenit comes to lugging a boat trailer?
even pop up campers seem to weigh 1500lbs and up. with most people running half ton trucks camper choice is very limited, i'm starting to think a small 20' motorhome is the way to go... only camper i have found is a travel lite 625 or the travel lite air, they weigh in at 1100lbs and 1280lbs empty.. makes them doable for a half tom. pricing is $18-$22G in alberta
Bump:
Picked up a 2014 1 ton Dodge diesel slt long box biggest cab with 38K on it recently. It's white so it "looks like a work truck". The camper mentioned earlier is still in play and will have it in 10 days I reckon.




























