Jun-20-2023 07:11 PM
Jun-24-2023 01:35 PM
Steve wrote:
The only disadvantage I have found would be if I were 4X4ing in big moguls I may tag the ground on an uphill transition but that's for me to know the limits of my rig.
Jun-24-2023 01:04 PM
Joe wrote:
This is not a truck camper!
https://www.globalxvehicles.com/
This is called an expedition vehicle by the manufacturer.
https://earthroamer.com/
These are truck campers. You keep comparing apples to oranges when you talk about your idea of a truck camper. trailers and overland vehicles are missing the most important aspect of off roading in a truck camper and that would be the truck...
https://gearjunkie.com/motors/best-truck-campers
Jun-24-2023 12:45 PM
Grit dog wrote:
^Huh??
Do you even camp?
Jun-24-2023 10:41 AM
RobertRyan wrote:Bedlam wrote:
If truck manufacturers were serious about the TC market, they would bring back the camper special design where the axle sits far back in the frame with less overhang. The shift of the axle rearward would address much of the CG issues people experience when they hang too much weight off the rear. My Mammoth is tail heavy unless I have water in the fresh or gray tanks that sit forward of the axle. With my trailer, I use a WDH to restore 100% of the front axle weight. Once you do this long enough, you find ways to compensate for a less than ideal design. I suppose you could start with a 84" CA chassis cab and lop off the rear overhang, but now you are looking where your primary fuel will be carried...
Something more inline with an Expediton Camper. They can carry a substantial payload and can off road as much as a much small TC I think most TC manufactuers in the US would be reticient to do something to differrent as they might lose their cudtomer base
Jun-24-2023 08:32 AM
jimh406 wrote:
Back to my first post, I'd rather not have a long overhang since that weight is all behind the rear axle. Based on what others have posted here, long TCs can actually take weight off the front axle. I don't think putting all of the weight on the rear axle can ever be.a good thing.
Jun-24-2023 07:59 AM
Jun-23-2023 07:48 PM
Bedlam wrote:
If truck manufacturers were serious about the TC market, they would bring back the camper special design where the axle sits far back in the frame with less overhang. The shift of the axle rearward would address much of the CG issues people experience when they hang too much weight off the rear. My Mammoth is tail heavy unless I have water in the fresh or gray tanks that sit forward of the axle. With my trailer, I use a WDH to restore 100% of the front axle weight. Once you do this long enough, you find ways to compensate for a less than ideal design. I suppose you could start with a 84" CA chassis cab and lop off the rear overhang, but now you are looking where your primary fuel will be carried...
Jun-23-2023 07:22 PM
Jun-23-2023 10:35 AM
Jun-23-2023 08:11 AM
notsobigjoe wrote:
Jim you make a good point about the overhang. I removed everything I could from my 4 foot overhang and the the front end still bounces a bit. "In my opinion" The large TC industry is going straight to the 5500 series truck and the small TC industry is going straight for the 1500 series truck. That leaves the rest of us to deal without the most efficient design for a truck camper. Why can't they design a truck camper with the weight forward and standard on the mid range models? I included this article to make my point. All these campers fit extremely well on the 1500 series trucks and I think the industry could do the same for the 2500 and 3500 series trucks. Keep the length and size but move the weight to the front of the rear axle.
https://www.truckcamperadventure.com/10-best-truck-campers-for-the-ram-1500-half-ton-pickup-truck/
Jun-23-2023 07:56 AM
jimh406 wrote:RobertRyan wrote:
Well in the first photo, the TC is fine for nice dirt roads. In the second he had it overloaded, on a dirt road with undulations pulling a trailer that was already stressing the chassis. A large jarring bump would be the straw that broke the Camels back.
You are making a guess which is fine. However, we don't know if the failure case is actually the trailer hitch weight, the TC, or a combination of both.
Back to my first post, I'd rather not have a long overhang since that weight is all behind the rear axle. Based on what others have posted here, long TCs can actually take weight off the front axle. I don't think putting all of the weight on the rear axle can ever be.a good thing.
Jun-23-2023 07:13 AM
RobertRyan wrote:StirCrazy wrote:
This is actualy quite silly. The first pic is a dually with a large camper on it, and nothing looks that bad. as long as the center of gravity is in the proper place at or ahead of the rear axle this will be fine as long as you're not grosly overloaded.
The second picture is the same thing, but what's different? They put an enclosed car trailer behind it and added a **** ton of weight behind the real axel that is most likely at its limit to start with.
The first pic is all good, second pic, the owner deserved what he got.
Well in the first photo, the TC is fine for nice dirt roads. In the second he had it overloaded, on a dirt road with undulations pulling a trailer that was already stressing the chassis. A large jarring bump would be the straw that broke the Camels back.
Jun-22-2023 07:11 PM
RobertRyan wrote:
Well in the first photo, the TC is fine for nice dirt roads. In the second he had it overloaded, on a dirt road with undulations pulling a trailer that was already stressing the chassis. A large jarring bump would be the straw that broke the Camels back.
Jun-22-2023 07:04 PM
StirCrazy wrote:
This is actualy quite silly. The first pic is a dually with a large camper on it, and nothing looks that bad. as long as the center of gravity is in the proper place at or ahead of the rear axle this will be fine as long as you're not grosly overloaded.
The second picture is the same thing, but what's different? They put an enclosed car trailer behind it and added a **** ton of weight behind the real axel that is most likely at its limit to start with.
The first pic is all good, second pic, the owner deserved what he got.
Jun-22-2023 06:09 PM
RobertRyan wrote:
This is what the post is about
How practical is this top heavy monster on a small trail? Excessive overhang and a high centre of gravity. A photo of a broken RAM 1 Ton went viral showed what overloading and the fulcrum effect can do. Should large Truck Campers be more like Expedition Vehicles? Expedition Vehicles do not have broken chassis