โJul-05-2017 11:36 PM
โJul-07-2017 04:33 PM
RE_Todd wrote:
It's an American style 5th wheel though, the door is on the wrong side for Australia, until it was mounted backwards on the cab and chassis.RobertRyan wrote:
Notice it is a Cabover Japanese MDT not available in the US, neither is the toad Pickup Truck. Body is different. Pickup Truck has a 4.5litre V8 Diesel.
โJul-07-2017 04:21 PM
RobertRyan wrote:
Notice it is a Cabover Japanese MDT not available in the US, neither is the toad Pickup Truck. Body is different. Pickup Truck has a 4.5litre V8 Diesel.
โJul-07-2017 06:12 AM
โJul-07-2017 06:12 AM
j-d wrote:
That unit is nice! I thought maybe the coach body was on a Cab/Chassis, but that view through the windshield says it must be a Cutaway.
Does the Cab still Tilt? I don't think I'd want anything with engine service access worse than what Ford E-Series already is. The Super C's appeal to me partly because the engine's accessible and the whole nose tips up to get at it. Hood, Fenders, Grille and All.
โJul-07-2017 05:31 AM
โJul-06-2017 10:28 PM
j-d wrote:
I understand what you said about the MDT's like the one under the "Class C" pictured at the top of this thread.
What I was trying to express, was my thought that the "entry level" MDT's we see making deliveries, probably equivalent to F550 but diesel cabovers, would make a nice Class C. More than a Sprinter, less than a Super C.
โJul-06-2017 07:29 PM
โJul-06-2017 06:29 PM
โJul-06-2017 05:52 PM
RobertRyan wrote:RobertRyan wrote:j-d wrote:
I've long thought that the smaller diesel cabover MDT's would make a great chassis for a Class C with some capacity, decent fuel mileage, reliability, and ease of driving.
I've thought though, that it'd be more of a Truck Camper, since my understanding was a "motor-home" had to have the cockpit accessible from the living quarters.
Is that what everybody still thinks? I remember cars called "Hardtop Convertible" where the top didn't fold, come off, or whatever. But no Center Post, no Window Frames. Then GM re-defined it. OK to have a center post and windows, just frame-less door windows.
Anyhow, I would give up a cut-away cab-chassis to keep a more solid small motor-home.
And, Robert, I like the vehicles and RV's you have Down There. The pickup you just pictured bears that out. Function over Form. Here in USA, it's all about Form...
It is not a small diesel. 8.8 litre or a 9.8litre. Par for the course for Japanese MDT's here
โJul-06-2017 04:52 PM
RobertRyan wrote:j-d wrote:
I've long thought that the smaller diesel cabover MDT's would make a great chassis for a Class C with some capacity, decent fuel mileage, reliability, and ease of driving.
I've thought though, that it'd be more of a Truck Camper, since my understanding was a "motor-home" had to have the cockpit accessible from the living quarters.
Is that what everybody still thinks? I remember cars called "Hardtop Convertible" where the top didn't fold, come off, or whatever. But no Center Post, no Window Frames. Then GM re-defined it. OK to have a center post and windows, just frame-less door windows.
Anyhow, I would give up a cut-away cab-chassis to keep a more solid small motor-home.
And, Robert, I like the vehicles and RV's you have Down There. The pickup you just pictured bears that out. Function over Form. Here in USA, it's all about Form...
It is not a small diesel. 8.8 litre or a 9.8litre. Par for the course for Japanese MDT's here
โJul-06-2017 04:49 PM
RobertRyan wrote:
Notice it is a Cabover Japanese MDT not available in the US, neither is the toad Pickup Truck. Body is different. Pickup Truck has a 4.5litre V8 Diesel.
โJul-06-2017 03:55 PM
โJul-06-2017 03:39 PM
โJul-06-2017 03:37 PM
pnichols wrote:
According to some of Robert's photos in various threads plenty of customers in Australia are nowadays going for "form" over "function", too.
Australia still has a huge land mass as compared to it's relatively low population ... like the U.S. used to have many decades ago. I prefer the ratio that Australia still has and if I RV'd there I'd take advantage of it by using a near expedition-grade RV to explore all over the place in the interior as much as legally possible. Of course one has to be a remote desert lover to appreciate that kind of RV'ing.
The documentary "From Alice to Ocean" clearly showed (to me) the beauty and allure of the pristine Australian Outback ... what an RV'ing dream place. There are only a few places left in the U.S. where this experience can be somewhat duplicated in an RV. We've been to one place and camped there in our Class C that maybe came close ... a spot in the Oregon Outback.