Regarding the Chinook 4x4 for sale and the comment about rear door making it hard to tow and use a bike rack. We tow a 16' house trailer behind our '2000 Chinook Baja when my son and his gal accompany us on weekend trips. Regarding the bike rack, we use a Yakima BackSwing for our electric bikes and have even used it with a small Vespa.
https://yakima.com/products/backswing
While on the subject of the Chinook Baja, I just returned home to Hood River, Oregon after a trip with a friend down Baja for surfing and fishing. Logged a total of around 4300 miles door to door. We spent a bit of time around L.A. Bay, and on Angel de La Guarda Island in the middriff islands area of the Sea of Cortez. I'm sure lot's of you know this area. Gorgeous to say the least! From there we drove to Zacatitos just North of San Jose del Cabo then I continued on to Todos Santos. The surf in both areas was small but clean and surprisingly uncrowded in the early mornings. I then visited friends in a canyon above Ojai Cal. On the way home I drove the Maracopa Highway (33) over to the 5 North. IMO, this is a drive not to be missed. Our Chinook Baja has the V-10 Triton engine and averaged between 8-9 mpg at 65-70 mph. About the Chinook 4x4 conversion for sale: I called the seller and spoke to him for around 20 minutes. He has no idea who did the conversion and cannot find an I.D. plate anywhere on the rig. Mine was converted by Quigley and came with an 11 page parts list in case I need to replace anything on the conversion. It is my understanding, that the BAJA model was only made from '2000 -'2004 and that only 200 were made. I suspect that they were too expensive for the market. I have the original sales papers for mine and it was over 100K when new.The seller could supply Quigley with his VIN # and they will have it on record if they did the conversion. The seller lists an impressive number of upgrades that I wish mine had which amount to thousands of dollars. If the rig is in fact as clean as it looks and it passes inspection by a qualified tech, the price seems appropriate. We have had ours for 3 years and like it very much. One note: Our rig works much better in snow than on sand. We need a faster way to air-down and air-up the tires for driving on washboard and onto softer sand. I am looking to install a 110 V compressor with 10-20 gallons of reserve air. Ideas and suggestions much appreciated. Cheers!