Yes, not much info. There is this thread... https://expeditionportal.com/forum/...mper-soft-wall-and-hard-wall-versions.222352/
I have. I will again tomorrow. They have limited pics and info on their web site.
I flipped thru the first vid and prob missed a lot (I played it on mute and x2 speed) but what I see in the still pic is the owner has added a lot of external storage. That to me speaks volumes about the camper's internal storage capacity. I get it tho, we did extra storage to our rig - and our FWC has the storage friendly front & side bench seating layout. And yes, I understand a lot of that external storage is for off road type stuff.
Right. But also, I'd suggest, what is a reasonable expectation for resident storage for a camper you are buying. Enough for an overnighter... weekend... full week without re provisioning ?
...why not just step up to the Base Camp?
Just look at the Nimbl for the layout. It appears to work for them.I've always liked the idea of showers being located in the entryway right inside the camper door. I wouldn't mind there needing to be a drain hole cut in the tray but you still need some type of floorplan to direct the water to the drain which would mean there being some type of raised floor in the entry.
Way long ago, they had a prototype with the CAMP-HBE shower in the toilet cabinet. This would be a good option for those with a portable toilet, but not so much with a cassette toilet as the cassette toilet takes up so much room there is little space to stand. The drain hose could go through a hole in the tray and onto the ground or into a bucket, or the drain hose could go into a holding tank built into the front passenger tray compartment.
That being said, perhaps the current shower location is the best. I recently went onto the OEV CAMP-HBE gallery and there are updates images of the new battery box under the passenger dinette seat and the updated shower pan (pasted below). It seems the pan is still quite elevated due to the need to drain out the angled rear of the camper rather than through the tray (which would be directly into the slide-out drawer that is built into the rear of the tray). The result has been a slightly lower shower pan floor, but it's still quite a bit higher than the rest of the camper floor. In the previous version of the showerpan, the height from ceiling down to the shower pan was 63" (5' 3"). I would like to see the measurement from the ceiling to the new, lower shower pan to understand how much was gained by the redesign. Hard to tell from the image, but it looks like the showerpan may be 4" to 6" deeper before. If so, that would mean around 5' 7" to 5' 9" headroom now.
My preference would be a much lower drain pan and the drain could exit towards the passenger side of the shower pan and the hose run sideways until it cleared the slide out drawer built into the tray. The hose could then go down through a hole into the tray and either drain directly onto the ground/bucket or into an under tray holding tank (perhaps within the passenger rear tray compartment). This would slam the shower pan all the way down to the floor, but allow the drain house to route around, and not impact, the rear, in-trays sliding drawer.
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Just look at the Nimbl for the layout. It appears to work for them.
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Others may have other reasons, but the two main reasons for us would be, first, like you said, BASE-CAMP is not easily removable for when you need the pickup in the summer or to remove and store the camper in the off-season.
Second is the BASE-CAMP is roughly twice the price of the CAMP-HBE. Jumping up an extra $80,000 over an already quite expensive CAMP-HBE is simply out of reach for many. I submit that the CAMP-HBE (with tray) being about twice the price of a CAMP-X is already straining the value question of "Are you getting twice the value for twice the price?". The BASE-CAMP is four times the price of the CAMP-X and twice the price of the CAMP-HBE. Each potential buyer will have to evaluate for themselves if they are getting two or four times the value over other OEV offerings. That value evaluation as well as the simple questions of how are you using it and what do you prefer.
And, didn't even consider needing a different type of pickup to carry the BASE-CAMP. They are currently only specing them for a Ford F-350.
I've always liked the idea of showers being located in the entryway right inside the camper door. I wouldn't mind there needing to be a drain hole cut in the tray but you still need some type of floorplan to direct the water to the drain which would mean there being some type of raised floor in the entry.
Way long ago, they had a prototype with the CAMP-HBE shower in the toilet cabinet. This would be a good option for those with a portable toilet, but not so much with a cassette toilet as the cassette toilet takes up so much room there is little space to stand. The drain hose could go through a hole in the tray and onto the ground or into a bucket, or the drain hose could go into a holding tank built into the front passenger tray compartment.
That being said, perhaps the current shower location is the best. I recently went onto the OEV CAMP-HBE gallery and there are updates images of the new battery box under the passenger dinette seat and the updated shower pan (pasted below). It seems the pan is still quite elevated due to the need to drain out the angled rear of the camper rather than through the tray (which would be directly into the slide-out drawer that is built into the rear of the tray). The result has been a slightly lower shower pan floor, but it's still quite a bit higher than the rest of the camper floor. In the previous version of the showerpan, the height from ceiling down to the shower pan was 63" (5' 3"). I would like to see the measurement from the ceiling to the new, lower shower pan to understand how much was gained by the redesign. Hard to tell from the image, but it looks like the showerpan may be 4" to 6" deeper before. If so, that would mean around 5' 7" to 5' 9" headroom now.
My preference would be a much lower drain pan and the drain could exit towards the passenger side of the shower pan and the hose run sideways until it cleared the slide out drawer built into the tray. The hose could then go down through a hole into the tray and either drain directly onto the ground/bucket or into an under tray holding tank (perhaps within the passenger rear tray compartment). This would slam the shower pan all the way down to the floor, but allow the drain house to route around, and not impact, the rear, in-trays sliding drawer.
I also plan on moving to the Base Camp. I want the HBE to work, I like the simplicity of the HBE and the easy ability to take it off the "tray" and use the pickup for other things. Just don't think the comprises of weight, size, storage, lack of AC etc make it a good fit for my use.
Someone asked on this thread about expectations of storage etc. Mine are pretty easy. Enough food, gear, clothing etc. to jump in and leave for a three day weekend and everything is always onboard in it's assigned place ready to go. Except perishables of course.