Wolfeman70 wrote:
A Class B towing a TT would be ideal. It would give us the RV features while driving I'm looking for while giving us storage and a place to stay that would be cheaper in the long run than a hotel. But as you pointed out, Class B's are very expensive.
Originally, I was looking at a Dodge Caravan with the swivel seats and table. That morphed into a small RV. Now I may have to go back and rethink my original idea. We lose the on the road bathroom ability and a few other on the road perks but gain a cheaper form of transportation at locations while still getting the nesting ability.
How long/ how much work does it take to go from driving to occupying a travel trailer? Could we pull into a rest stop or truck stop (or Wal-Mart parking lot), get out of the van, walk into our TT and go to sleep?
A minivan won't work. They can't tow anything substantial. You will have to get a cloth-sided hybrid tent camper and that is not suitable for long-term living (especially if it gets cold).
ALL the minivans and SUVs are payload limited. Their towing numbers are baloney because you will run out of payload capacity way, way before you run out of towing capacity.
You will want a 1-ton van. That will let you tow a large trailer and give you tons of interior room. You can throw in a porta-potti and curtain it off. You can put in a 12V DC fridge and still have enough room for a folding table and space to lay down on the floor. Sort of like a class-B at 1/3 the cost.
A 1-ton pickup truck has the payload capacity, but no interior room.
For size reference, most 15 passenger church vans are 1-ton vans. You will be able to go through the drive-thru with one and park almost anywhere.
Hooking up and unhooking the travel trailer depends on how settled you want to get. If you can get a level pull-through spot for an overnight stay, set the parking brake, put the van in park, chock the trailer wheels, plug the electrical in. If you don't want to put down the stabilizer jacks, it'll bounce a bit, but if you're too tired and just want to go to sleep, that's about all you have to do. Maybe 10-15 minutes?
If you want to do everything including leveling the trailer, unhooking the trailer, hooking up sewer and water, maybe 45 minutes. Hooking up will take a bit longer. Goes quicker once you get used to that particular vehicle and have a set place for everything.
If you don't have a generator for the trailer, you won't have much electrical power at a rest stop. No A/C, no microwave, no TV. You will have water, lights and heat. A trailer will heat sink in hot weather and become an oven inside. That's one of the reasons I like the class-B / van idea - they have A/C available all the time (get a carbon monoxide sensor for the van). There is over 9' of space behind the 2nd row seats on a Chevy long-wheelbase van. More than enough room to lay out on pads and take a quick nap.
Honestly, I'd prefer to just go with the van, but my wife absolutely refuses to use a porta-potti. I joked with her that the toilet in a class-B is going to cost an extra $40,000 because a van with a porta-potti and fridge can do almost everything that a class B can do (and it can tow more too) as long as you have a TT to sleep in at night.