โDec-26-2015 01:42 PM
โJan-01-2016 04:18 AM
PAThwacker wrote:
Using modern passenger vehicles designed for daycare centers, grocery stores and comutting are not ideal tow vehicles.
Users claiming they are often boast ideal conditions but are grossly exceeding hitch ratings, payload, or gross combined weight ratios.
Passengers, coolers, clothes, drinks, firewood, water, fishing poles, chairs, generator, tools, gray/black water, and bedding are examples of everyday camping trips. Some days more goods such as bikes, canoe, quads, and grills. All deduct tow rating of truck or camper CCC
Loading up the trailer adds tongue weight. Exceeding tongue weight limit can cause crash to occur and harm others
So use that 3500lb rating all you want, destroy the drivetrain and stay out of the ditch!
โDec-31-2015 10:37 PM
GaryWT wrote:
I would not want to tow a box type trailer in the wind, afraid the thing would blow over. Pop up or tab and the like is what fits here.
โDec-31-2015 10:11 PM
โDec-31-2015 08:48 PM
โDec-31-2015 08:36 PM
Mike Up wrote:
As I said earlier, the only TTs I would recommend are the Rpods. This due to their light weight, short length, and aerodynamic/small frontal surface area design.
I don't recommend true 100% fiberglass trailers. I talk to my dealers service centers and hear of the horror stories of fiberglass stress cracks. Plus I've been in them, and their short ceilings and small living area leave me wanting a pop up over them. I only recommend something I would buy myself.
As far as tent trailers, there is some significant issues with the tent down to the ground. As many know in the U.S.A., raccoons are everywhere and numerous and most are fairly tame to people unfortunately.
As with any tent, you can't cook inside or have any food inside the tent, as the raccoons will tear the tent open with their sharp claws and pillage for food whether there's any in there or not, or just the smell in the tent material from cooking in it. That's also with you in there or not, as they aren't afraid of people.
I've seen this happen 1st hand, several times, to the inexperienced camper.
You need a trailer that's off the ground, and where the tent can't be reached by these critters. A pop up with solid 1/4 or 1/2 walls, and a hard door, keeps them from coming in. That's why you have a kitchen in most pop ups while tent trailers rarely have a kitchen in them.
I like both tent trailers and pop ups, but you have to treat a tent trailer like a tent, while a pop up can be used just as a travel trailer.
Pop Tops were popular in the 90s as I've looked at several used units. They were essentially replaced by High Wall Pop Ups in the 2000s.
โDec-31-2015 07:32 PM
โDec-31-2015 06:13 PM
Less Stuff wrote:RobertRyan wrote:Less Stuff wrote:
This is also an option watch the videos:
Jumping Jack trailers
Most useful small RV I can think of.
About 30 local builders of these, but not basic ones like the Jumping Jack
But how quick do they set up? Most take forever to set up for camping.
How many toys can they carry?
Check the Jumping Jack video or this link.
set up
Alas the OP wants a hard sided unit however.
โDec-31-2015 04:41 PM
RobertRyan wrote:Less Stuff wrote:
This is also an option watch the videos:
Jumping Jack trailers
Most useful small RV I can think of.
About 30 local builders of these, but not basic ones like the Jumping Jack
โDec-31-2015 02:16 PM
Less Stuff wrote:
This is also an option watch the videos:
Jumping Jack trailers
Most useful small RV I can think of.
โDec-31-2015 10:18 AM
โDec-31-2015 10:16 AM
โDec-31-2015 09:33 AM
โDec-31-2015 08:37 AM
PAThwacker wrote:
One other spec you are overlooking is max frontal area limits.
The barn door effect of the brick in tow can squash a good V8 with poor ring gear. You are
Limited to ten foot pup max with a 3500 tow rated anything: VAN, SUV, CUV.
โDec-31-2015 08:14 AM