One of Us
| Big: My question to you is are you going to use your camper in cooler/cold weather where you will be using the heater? We started out in a Chinook camper on a Toyota frame with a pop up roof with soft sides. Worked fine in CA but on a Nebraska pheasant hunt (no snow but below freezing at night) we burned through a 20# bottle of propane every 3 days. We finally kept the top down to preserve gas. You could line the soft sides with Reflectex insulation but you have to still deal with the condensation. We now have an Alaskan Camper (pop up with hard sides) we bought used for less than the cost of a new Palomino. Quality build throughout. Highly recommend an Alaskan. The other issue with pickup campers is lack of storage space. We solved that by mounting a utility truck body from Skaug in LA and sliding the camper in the utility body. |
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One of Us
| One of my friends has a Palomino. They are fine for on road travel but the wood frame can be a problem for off road travel. I had a similar camper before I upgraded to a Fourwheel Camper. They have a welded aluminum frame that is bullet proof. I use mine to get off the path. Spartan design but great quality. They are costly but hold their value. lb |
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One of Us
| When I was a kid, my father was a regional dealer for Four Wheel. NICE product then and now! I ever move back to the states, I am buying one and a Toyota Tundra to carry it. |
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one of us
| One thing one needs to watch out for I buying a used camper is the year of manufacture some of the older ones well not fit in the newer pickup beds. I think about 97 on |
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One of Us
| quote: Originally posted by p dog shooter: One thing one needs to watch out for I buying a used camper is the year of manufacture some of the older ones well not fit in the newer pickup beds. I think about 97 on
Very good to know, thank you! |
| Posts: 7782 | Location: Das heimat! | Registered: 10 October 2012 |
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