PleasureWay's Traverse on the E-series was more of a sleeper van, although it had a small kitchen area. To sleep more than two, it had to have an upper bunk under a pop-up top. Sort up like an upscaled version of the camper vans Westfalia and Sportmobile built on the VW vans for more than 40 years. If you want to tow a boat, you would be looking for a Traverse with 5.4 V-8.
Sportmobile will still do this type of conversion, on order. While they have a wide selection of conversion plans, pretty much every thing is done to customer order, furnishings can be located where structure and chassis equipment allows. There are also smaller companies that do camper conversions, sometimes as slide-in equipment. You'll find some of these, as well as DIY conversions, when shopping used vans. What you can do depends on how many people you need carry, how many you need to bunk.
These less residential camping van conversions often work better on boat ramps and off paved highways because they don't have as much stuff hanging under the van as you'll find on more residential B's.
A search on Pleasureway Traverse should take you to YouTube sales demos from dealers (2012-2013) with further links to similar packages on other van platforms, like the Active conversion on Nissan NV. Some of these will be links to European offerings, where this type of camper van is much more popular.
Tom Test
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