Forum Discussion

Derek568's avatar
Derek568
Explorer
Jan 03, 2021

Looking for Truck + Truck Camper, Seeking Guidance

Hello all,

I've read many of the threads here, and I've been doing a lot of research, but I figured I should also ask the pros for their opinions as well. I am looking to get myself a truck and truck camper. I'm planning to travel in various national parks. Nothing too crazy off-road, but I want something that can drive on muddy backroads and not get stuck. I am currently thinking I can get a 2500 (3/4 ton) type truck, and a light truck camper, and then I'll have an affordable combo. I currently have a budget of 25-30k dollars. I'm more interested in investing in the truck at this point, because I plan to eventually upgrade to a newer truck camper anyway when finances allow in a year or two.

Does anyone have any recommendations for trucks and/or campers that meet my criteria? I would greatly appreciate any input.

Thanks so much!
  • People don’t complain about having too much truck! Like someone said, any hard sided TC will need at LEAST a 1 Ton Dually...
  • deltabravo wrote:
    Pick the camper first, then make sure you get a truck that has the capability to haul it.


    ^^This^^

    Same applies to any trailer or towable...you may have every intention of buying a certain size camper, then find a great deal on a bigger/heavier one...don't hesitate to check back with the forum on weights/suggested trucks for any models you're looking at.
  • Derek568 wrote:
    Thanks, I'm looking into Truck Camper Warehouse.



    Any Arctic Fox on their lot really needs a dually. People haul the short bed 811 and short bed 865 on SRW trucks, but they end up right up against (usually OVER) the weight limits of the truck.
    Those are the two smallest AF models, which are both made in a long bed version as well. For 10 years I had an 811 long bed model on my dually, which pushed the GVWR limits of the truck in my signature.

    Pick the camper first, then make sure you get a truck that has the capability to haul it.


    My Arctic Fox 811
  • And consider $1-2k outfitting your truck into your budget. If you do the work yourself. More if you don’t.
    + $ for setting up the camper, generator, accessories, etc. it all adds up.
    If you can find a good combo for sale it might be the best choice.
  • Welcome!
    $25-30k total for a truck and camper means you’ll have to search more than diligently or be content with very high miles or an old truck.
    Couple condensations.
    Truck: since 2wd is out of the equation it sounds, you can’t take that price break. 2wd trucks are much cheaper. If you can get by with a reg cab or ext cab that will save $ I’d you find one.
    3/4 ton vs 1 ton? If you’re going with a srw truck, don’t be picky. They’re the same truck with less springs in the rear, no matter what the rvnet contingent likes to believe. Your available trucks will be far more as 3/4 tons out number 1 tons considerably and helper springs or airbags are cheap.

    Gas vs diesel? Personal choice but you’ll get a lot more/newer truck for your money with a gasser, only at the expense of fuel mileage, for your purposes. Figure 8 mpg vs 12 mpg. I would 100% recommend a gas truck for your use, budget and knowledge.

    You live in MA. One of the worst places to find an older truck that isn’t a rust bucket or on its way to being one. I would NOT buy a local truck in your budget range unless it was NOT driven much in winter. If you don’t know the differences between a salt belt vehicle and a clean one, just trust that you’ll be better off in the long run by ensuring you do not buy a future rust bucket.
    Specifically you have $15-20k to spend on a truck to leave $10k for a nice camper. Most any TC you’d get for around $5k will either be ancient or have problems. I’d be after a mid 2000s to early 2010s GM with a 6.0. Preferably with 6 speed. Or a Superduty with V10 or 6.2 if you can score one new enough. Pass on any with the 5.4. They are turds. Reliable save for spark coils and spitting spark plugs potentially but gutless in big trucks. That said I wouldn’t turn down the right deal on a Dodge but would prefer the other 2 in the age you’re looking at. (And I’m a Mopar guy...)
    Bottom line, lowest miles, most maint records and best care/condition is what you’re after over brand.

    Camper? Keep it at 4klbs or less, loaded, for a srw truck for comfortable hauling and minimum truck mods required. Make sure it doesn’t have water damage and that major appliances all work. Anything more than that is creature comforts and icing on the cake.
    They’re all just boxes with stuff inside. And older campers, just like trucks, brand is not as important as condition.
    I also wouldn’t be afraid to travel for the camper. I believe they’re more limited in number up by you. Out west they’re very plentiful so don’t take a bad one at home.
    Helps if you have the truck and have it ready for a camper, then it’s an easy road trip and load up n go.
  • Geo*Boy wrote:
    If you are going used, look for a gasoline 350/3500 truck and a non-slide camper. Visit Truck Camper Warehouse in NH.


    Thanks, I'm looking into Truck Camper Warehouse. It's right near me, and they seem to have some good stuff. Thanks for the tip!
  • If you are going used, look for a gasoline 350/3500 truck and a non-slide camper. Visit Truck Camper Warehouse in NH.
  • I had a 2500 LB CC Dodge Ram, Hemi 5.7... I did lots of research and matched a Palomino hardside camper to it... perfect combo. Had no sway problems, drove beautifully. I made sure I had enough payload left to put my stuff in it... added Firestone airbags to truck. Fun way to go. If I had gotten a 3500 I also could have probably gotten a truck camper with a slide, which would have been nice. But the ease of driving was a major thing to me. Good luck and enjoy.
  • bet bang for your buck is to buy a used truck skip the 2500/250 and go with a 3500/350 as there is not a big price difference but a lot of load carrying difference
  • “I'm more interested in investing in the truck at this point,”

    The truck isn’t first. The rule is...buy or select the camper, trailer or 5er first, then match a truck or other tow vehicle to it...gross weight, payload, max rear axle etc.