...anyone ever had one and if so what did ya think?
Oh, yeah. Chalet #1747, built 1/77, owned
past tense. It was one of the more pristine / quasi-restored ones out there, but I essentailly ran out of available funds and space to continue the restoration. The current broker (?) of it has it for sale along with twelve others that he had gathered up for some mystery guy in Indiana. As the #2 moderator at the Yahoo Chalet forum linked to below, I can provide contact info for all of the sellers that I'm aware of. Map of the ones (full vehicles / orphaned camper units)
here, click the down arrow at that page next to the brief description for an expanded one.
Ownership pro points:
- Sheer coolness factor of rarely seen, classic '70s vehicle
- It is technically a motorhome. Park in the pouring rain, turn around and go straight into the back without getting wet, no absolute need to raise the roof if you don't mind stooping a bit
- Better side and forward visibility out of the camper than other aftermarket campers. 4Wheel brand slide-ins just have the one side window and no forward ones.
- Plenty of vintage / reproduction GM truck parts available
- Certifiably more durable in offroad conditions than some slide-in truck mounted campers (according to one story told by Chalet owner who saw a falling apart aftermarket standard camper in a super rocky river bottom area).
- May potentially increase in collector value when kept in / restored to factory original condition
- Support group for Chalet addicts available at the free-to-join Yahoo forum link below
Cons:
- Gawd-awful gas mileage
- Most 'affordable' Chalets for sale are in need of significant clean-up / restoration. Vehicles not needing restoration will set you back $7 to $13 grand depending if you aim for one that is modded for real camping or one that can park in a museum
- No toilet
- Inferior factory design of roof / upper walls interface
- Less-than-actually-practical-camper straight out of the factory. Lighter weight interior pieces and overdrive tranny, diesel conversion or fuel injection conversion and a few other upgrades such as a more easily removable & replaceable camper unit would make 'em better.
I could go on at length. If money fell out of the sky, I'd get a '76 GMC Jimmy Casa Grande version to have as a museum quality collectible. To create a practical one, I would possibly go the route of a pure custom built Blazer using an
all fiberglass tub, which would then have an orphaned Chalet shell outfitted with better modern interior bits, with the roof and removeability problems solved.