get a 100ft 10awg extension cord from HF and its far enough away that even in a tent it will be far more tolerable, stuff it behind a rock or tree and it makes it real quiet.. you already got the genny, put it to use.. I recently converted from tent camping and camped at tons of sites and almost never found a camp that didnt allow genny use in the day time.. yeah they all restrict hours of operation and some may require them to be the quieter ones but outright genny bans are fairly rare outside national parks.. now that you got a trailer those tent-only sites wont be welcoming you anyhow and most camps that allow trailers will allow gennys.. Ive even had night time bans lifted because sub freezing temps were going to run everyone's furnaces all night and most people were gonna wake up with a dead battery w/out electricity.
If your in national forest land you can camp anywhere you want, no quiet time.. run it all night long if you want, if there is anyone nearby the'll be several hundred yards down the road and wont hear a thing.. plenty of room to take that extension cord to its limit.. however having data signal for work is going to be the harder part, if your planning on working your going to need to stick somewhat close to civilization.
I'd also look into a newer computer, a new i5-9600K complete system can draw less than 50w idle, less than 100W w/single threaded tasks, and less than 150W fully loaded.. and it outperforms most previous generation i7 CPU's.. monitor power also goes up exponentially with size, so go with the smallest size you can tolerate.. yeah a 30in might be great, but a 22in might be half the power load and far more practical.. Solid state drives use virtually no power compared to spinning disks, so thats another thing to consider.
and I agree, you needa determine your base loads before you start throwing a ton of money into this or you could end up in a terrible position.. Calculators are great and all but nothign beats real world testing, get your self a watt-o-meter, both AC and DC versions.. run each appliance for 24h in typical environmental conditions and figure out how much power they draw a day, then add up all your appliances and that is your minimum budget..
yeah that tesla battery is gona be cheap, but how much is a 24v charger adequate for it gonna cost (I got a 630w AC charger for my 100A Lithium, your gonna want a few thousand watts to quickly charge that thing)? you should also be looking past 24v solar.. Panasonic HIT is what i'mna be using its like 65v, the MPPT controller will gimme the charge voltage I want.. Also hooking up a undersized solar and undersized AC charger up to a very large bank is totally ass backwards and leaving much of the Lipo benefits on the table when it takes several days of no usage to get it back up to full.. its a much better position to be in with oversized charging sources for your battery bank, especially solar since you almost never get its full rated outputs.. if 650W of Solar and/or AC is the sweet spot for my single 100AH battleborn, neither are going to be near adaquate for a lithium system several times its size/capacity... If you do really need that capacity, you may end up using that generator far far more than you ever wanted since your never going to get enough power to keep the Tesla batteries in good shape otherwise.. then your right back where you started, just with alot less money and room.
When I jumped to Lithium Batteries, the capacity I needed actually went down in the real world.. I needed far more capacity with lead weights because the batteries charged so slowly, charge/discharge effencies were terrible and variable with larger loads.. with lead 24h at 10A does not equal 12h at 20A, you'd be lucky to get 8h.. then a vast majority of the capacity was untouchable or else id risk junking the batteries.. I was planning for >300AH of lead and concerned I may need more still, but with Lithium 100AH is quite sufficient for me.. since I can charge it up in a few short hours, instead of all damn day it means I dont need as much capacity as I would otherwise, now running generator daily for a couple hours is no big deal, and there is no pressure on me to get it back to 100% SOC.. its far better than lead where you gotta run it all day because its gotta soak in absorb mode and the things dont last if you let leave em partially charged for days on end.