Forum Discussion

SeeingStars's avatar
SeeingStars
Explorer
Jun 17, 2015

Storing Pop-Up TC in garage - Sloped driveway

Hi everyone,

I've been away from the forums for a couple of years. I've been busy camping and working and raising teenage girls. Currently I have a 2012 Jayco 23J hybrid travel trailer and I have loved owning it. Since buying it 3.5 years ago it has seen heavy use. But now with girls gone away to college, it's much too large for me and I'm planning to sell it and downsize to a pop-up truck camper.

I want the pop up for a hundred different reasons, but one of the main ones is the ability to store it inside my garage away from the elements without having to pay a storage fee somewhere. The opening I have to fit the camper through is 7' high. This presents the dilemma that the camper has to be unloaded and then moved into the garage. I'm aware of the various dollies that can be used to move the camper easily.

Here's my challenge: My driveway is sloped. It's not unbelievably steep, but it's sloped enough. I know that I'd be unable to push a 1500 to 2000 lb TC on a dolly up the slope myself. Here is an image of the travel trailer that illustrates the slope I'm dealing with.


So I need to find a way to get the TC onto some sort of dolly and then get it up the slope and into the garage. Does anyone have an experience with this or a viable - safe - idea?

I have considered having a small trailer built to mount the TC onto and then backing it into the garage with my truck. Such a trailer would:
  • Only be used for transporting the TC from the garage to the cul de sac for loading/unloading
  • need a very low deck height - less than 12"
  • need to provide a way to tie down the TC for safe transport during it's short trip.


Basically, is there a way to get this done safely? I've not owned a truck camper so I'm not sure if I'm crazy or not with this idea.

Thanks,

Mike
  • I (now) use a small hand winch, with an eye bold screwed into my house sill plate to move my dolly. Dolly wheels that can lock directionally are very useful. (dolly shown here )
    You can also get small 12v winces to make it even easier, and sometimes I even use my truck winch to pull it around.
  • After you get the dolly figured out, put a hitch on the front of your vehicle to push the camper into the garage. It will be a lot easier to guide it that way than backing it in.

    :):)
  • One thing to watch for: my Bronco 1200 (1995) has tripod feet. When cranked to its lowest level, the base is still 17" in the air. And considering how high it gets cranked to load on the truck - I'm not sure I could be without the tripod feet (although I haven't tried. I'm blessed with a 10' high garage door). So make sure that whatever you buy can get lowered to the ground?
  • RickW's avatar
    RickW
    Explorer III
    I did it, it was a PITA. The HOA did not allow overnight parking.

    I took a utility trailer, removed the rear gate, axle and springs and installed 2-8" swivel casters on the front and 4 straight 8" casters on angle iron just behind the axle location. This put the deck at about 12" off the floor. (Note: I could put the springs and axle back on and still use as utility trailer)

    After unloading and reloading the TC in the street, I used a SUV to connect the hitch and back it carefully into the garage. A drop hitch ball on the truck would work. It cleared by about 2" on each side and the fan dome by about 2' on top.

    One issue was the length of the raised jacks. I had to remove the rear jacks so they would not scrape when elevating the hitch.

    I also had to bridge the street gutter to keep from stressing things. Casters are not rubber tires and have little tolerance for uneven surfaces.

    Another issue is you cannot raise the TC top in the garage if you have a standard garage door opener.

    After a few times, I paid for outside storage until we moved.

    Why they won't build garage doors 8' tall......:M.

    Others have built custom dollies with casters or 8" tires. There also have been ones on tracks or pulled into the garage with a winch.

    Don't unload directly on the sloping driveway-you may see your TC try to walk into the street all by itself :E

    Hope this helps. Measure very carefully. Good Luck.