semperfidher
New member
Hello all!
First off, I wanted to thank all of the other gearheads on Expedition Portal for the inspiration to just get outside and explore new places. While most of us on here seem to simply be tinkerers and weekend warriors, the vast expanse of knowledge on this site (gained from countless jaunts into the wilderness) has helped me immensely. And for those of you who are truly living the off-grid lifestyle, overlanding across the world...please keep it up. I live vicariously through your adventures.
Our story:
In 2011, my wife and I traded our 1990 Chevrolet C1500, which was always reliable and in beautiful condition, for a 1974 Chevrolet K20 with a 1970's Mitchell camper on board. While I gained a few hundred bucks from the trade (which i immediately invested back into the K20), we definitely downgraded in our truck's good looks, reliability, and gas mileage. HOWEVER, what we gained was 1. 4WD, and 2. The means, via the camper, to get into the Rocky Mtns during the wintertime. The result? We had a wonderful winter of wilderness camping in Colorado's myriad remote, snow-covered, forest service roads.
Later that spring, and only two days before we were moving across the country for a military change of station, the K20 developed extreme rod knock. We were against a wall. I had no time, no tools (movers had already come), and couldn't risk breaking down in the middle of nowhere with my life's possessions trailering behind my truck.
The Result? A last-minute scramble on AutoTrader and Craigslist to find the truck I had always wanted: a 3rd Gen Ram HD. I didn't want a 6.7l, and found a great deal on an '07 2500 4x4 with a 5.9 and 48re. I was after an ST Trimmed work truck, because i wanted the simplicity of manual windows, doors, seats, etc.
Buying a used work truck in the American West is a gamble, but the truck felt solid, albeit a bit beat up. I've since had to replace ball joints, u-joints, front drive shaft, and brake components (all the NOT FUN things to fix), but almost five years later, I feel as though we've shaken out most of the abused parts from the truck's former life on a Wyoming ranch.
The truck that started it all...
My wife remodeled the inside of the Mitchell Camper, and made it real "lodgey" and comfortable
BEFORE
AFTER
New Truck at the Dealer
Hooked up to the new camper (1992 One-owner Hallmark we picked up for $3500...the original camper didn't fit the Ram)
New Towing Mirrors, JBL Door Speakers, and Firestone Airbags Installed
First off, I wanted to thank all of the other gearheads on Expedition Portal for the inspiration to just get outside and explore new places. While most of us on here seem to simply be tinkerers and weekend warriors, the vast expanse of knowledge on this site (gained from countless jaunts into the wilderness) has helped me immensely. And for those of you who are truly living the off-grid lifestyle, overlanding across the world...please keep it up. I live vicariously through your adventures.
Our story:
In 2011, my wife and I traded our 1990 Chevrolet C1500, which was always reliable and in beautiful condition, for a 1974 Chevrolet K20 with a 1970's Mitchell camper on board. While I gained a few hundred bucks from the trade (which i immediately invested back into the K20), we definitely downgraded in our truck's good looks, reliability, and gas mileage. HOWEVER, what we gained was 1. 4WD, and 2. The means, via the camper, to get into the Rocky Mtns during the wintertime. The result? We had a wonderful winter of wilderness camping in Colorado's myriad remote, snow-covered, forest service roads.
Later that spring, and only two days before we were moving across the country for a military change of station, the K20 developed extreme rod knock. We were against a wall. I had no time, no tools (movers had already come), and couldn't risk breaking down in the middle of nowhere with my life's possessions trailering behind my truck.
The Result? A last-minute scramble on AutoTrader and Craigslist to find the truck I had always wanted: a 3rd Gen Ram HD. I didn't want a 6.7l, and found a great deal on an '07 2500 4x4 with a 5.9 and 48re. I was after an ST Trimmed work truck, because i wanted the simplicity of manual windows, doors, seats, etc.
Buying a used work truck in the American West is a gamble, but the truck felt solid, albeit a bit beat up. I've since had to replace ball joints, u-joints, front drive shaft, and brake components (all the NOT FUN things to fix), but almost five years later, I feel as though we've shaken out most of the abused parts from the truck's former life on a Wyoming ranch.
The truck that started it all...
My wife remodeled the inside of the Mitchell Camper, and made it real "lodgey" and comfortable
BEFORE
AFTER
New Truck at the Dealer
Hooked up to the new camper (1992 One-owner Hallmark we picked up for $3500...the original camper didn't fit the Ram)
New Towing Mirrors, JBL Door Speakers, and Firestone Airbags Installed