So wow, it has been awhile since I updated y'all (see I can do that now that we are back in the south and are original southerners)
We have now been full timing in our home-built flatbed camper for almost four months. We have traveled through Washington, Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, South Dakota, North Dakota, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Illinois, Kentucky, and are currently camping in Tennessee.
The build has worked out amazingly well. Solar was as awesome as we hoped and has been able to run the air conditioner during the day as well as provide a little battery charge at the same time. We do use the generator at night for a little bit if the day is hot and muggy. Because we want to sail, we have actually stayed at quite a few Army Corp campgrounds which are on lakes, are cheap, and usually have electricity and showers.
We took the rig up to 8300 feet in the Bighorn mountains of Wyoming and she did quite well on the 8% grade even pulling the sailboat. Not speedy mind you, but we felt in control the whole time.
Took a trip to Devil's Tower and stayed in the national park there with a great view of the monument.
While traveling in North Dakota, after staying at the gorgeous, free Army corp campground right on the water (Douglas Creek, Lake Sakakawea) we noticed our truck was showing an engine light. We bought a $50 code reader and found it was a problem with cylinder #2. Darn, why did I only have injectors 1 and 4 replaced last time I had major service?
Not to fear, this is how we designed the truck pods. We found a nice empty campground outside Fargo in Hannaford, ND ($10 a night with electricity, water, showers) and unloaded both pods from the flatbed truck. We put the WR250R motorcycles on the empty flatbed and drove the truck to RDO truck service center in Fargo. We rode the motorcycles back to the pods and stayed in them for five days while the truck got new injectors for #2 and #3 (and a 2nd inline fuel filter). Repodded (that really should be a word now) and were on our way running better than ever (about 9.5 to 10mpg depending on driving).
We sailed on Lake Winnebago in Wisconsin which was superb (another great Army Corp campground) and also on Lake Carlyle in Illinois.
We found ourselves in Kentucky on Labor day and the only campsite left was an unlevel one nobody wanted. Not to fear, our camper jacks were able to keep the pods level by relieving the pressure on the truck springs on the downhill side.
We are now in Tennessee and have beached our sailboat at the campsite for the first time ever (see last pic). Hopefully we get some wind soon, but it is HOT in the south (92 today).