montypower
Adventure Time!
Here's the video of us taking delivery:
Over the years there have been many off road travel type vehicles. In the early days it was a 1992 Mitsubishi Montero with a cheap tent. There were a number of 4WD trucks after that 1983 Toyota Hilux (rock crawler), Isuzu Trooper, Isuzu Rodeo... I started getting the overland bug around 2009 and built a 1992 Isuzu Pup "little gray" on 33s ARB lockers, low gears, exo and ARB roof tent. Next came a new 2013 Toyota Tacoma DC with lots of modifications and hard shell Autohome Air Top tent on custom canopy with ARB fridge and all the goodies. Then came a 2003 Mitsubishi Montero (most modified in the US) on King 2.5" Coilovers, ARB Lockers, Gears, Full Skids, Bumpers, Winch and on and on. I decided that tents SUCK and created a sleeping platform inside (game changer). This rig started into some longer range multi-state trips.
Seeking greater comfort for extended travel... it was replaced with a new 2016 Toyota Tundra DC with 2016 FWC Hawk. The camper was incredible (coming from a tent); I never removed it from the truck and accumulated 160 nights in the first 9 months! I was hooked. But the Four Wheel Camper isn't great... it's basically a tin can. Terrible insulation. Noisy in the rain or wind. Ongoing condensation issues. No bathroom. Bad for stealth camping. Drove it all over from Baja to BC. Put on around 50k miles in just over 1 year! Then sold it.
Next up was the 2010 Winnebago View (24ft RV) on Mercedes Sprinter Chassis. I absolutely LOVE the Sprinter vans. They drive so good. Incredible view (huge windshield), ideal seating position (comfy), fantastic MPG (averaged 17 loaded)... It's basically like being at home. Added a HUGE marine Fridge/Freezer, 60+ Gallons of water, 920W Solar, 400AH Batteries and more. It was easy to be off grid for 4 weeks solo. Or 2-3 weeks with my wife. We built a high clearance moto rack and hauled a Z125 moto for exploring areas and doing self shuttle for MTB rides. Even with the 4.5" Suspension Lift, Off Road Tires, ARB Compressors and more. Still longed for more off road capability.
Return to Truck Camper!!! We purchased a 2019 Ford F250 Crew and 2013 Northstar Laredo SC camper. And took it on a trial trip. It was too BIG. Nearly the same size as the Winnebago with worse turning radius and minimal capability increase with bad MPG. SOLD IT.
Explored all the camper offerings both hard side and popup style. Decided the best fit was the Northstar Liberty. So we custom ordered one!
Over the years there have been many off road travel type vehicles. In the early days it was a 1992 Mitsubishi Montero with a cheap tent. There were a number of 4WD trucks after that 1983 Toyota Hilux (rock crawler), Isuzu Trooper, Isuzu Rodeo... I started getting the overland bug around 2009 and built a 1992 Isuzu Pup "little gray" on 33s ARB lockers, low gears, exo and ARB roof tent. Next came a new 2013 Toyota Tacoma DC with lots of modifications and hard shell Autohome Air Top tent on custom canopy with ARB fridge and all the goodies. Then came a 2003 Mitsubishi Montero (most modified in the US) on King 2.5" Coilovers, ARB Lockers, Gears, Full Skids, Bumpers, Winch and on and on. I decided that tents SUCK and created a sleeping platform inside (game changer). This rig started into some longer range multi-state trips.
Seeking greater comfort for extended travel... it was replaced with a new 2016 Toyota Tundra DC with 2016 FWC Hawk. The camper was incredible (coming from a tent); I never removed it from the truck and accumulated 160 nights in the first 9 months! I was hooked. But the Four Wheel Camper isn't great... it's basically a tin can. Terrible insulation. Noisy in the rain or wind. Ongoing condensation issues. No bathroom. Bad for stealth camping. Drove it all over from Baja to BC. Put on around 50k miles in just over 1 year! Then sold it.
Next up was the 2010 Winnebago View (24ft RV) on Mercedes Sprinter Chassis. I absolutely LOVE the Sprinter vans. They drive so good. Incredible view (huge windshield), ideal seating position (comfy), fantastic MPG (averaged 17 loaded)... It's basically like being at home. Added a HUGE marine Fridge/Freezer, 60+ Gallons of water, 920W Solar, 400AH Batteries and more. It was easy to be off grid for 4 weeks solo. Or 2-3 weeks with my wife. We built a high clearance moto rack and hauled a Z125 moto for exploring areas and doing self shuttle for MTB rides. Even with the 4.5" Suspension Lift, Off Road Tires, ARB Compressors and more. Still longed for more off road capability.
Return to Truck Camper!!! We purchased a 2019 Ford F250 Crew and 2013 Northstar Laredo SC camper. And took it on a trial trip. It was too BIG. Nearly the same size as the Winnebago with worse turning radius and minimal capability increase with bad MPG. SOLD IT.
Explored all the camper offerings both hard side and popup style. Decided the best fit was the Northstar Liberty. So we custom ordered one!
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