zimm17
Observer
I'm really on the fence between a Ruger 6' adventure trailer with an extra large RTT vs getting a fiberglass 16-17' travel trailer built (Scamp, Casita, Escape)
Tow vehicle: '15 Wrangler Rubicon with 35's, 4.10 gears, already have T3 brake controller and 7 pin connector installed.
Who: Me, 2 boys (aged 4 and 6), and momma
What: To go camping on and off the grid
Where: Right now, campgrounds in the Appalachians (no hookups mostly, but a camp spot with picnic table and fire ring). I'm military, so we could be stationed anywhere in the US and plan to explore the national parks in the future.
I don't really off-road with the camp gear yet- here on the east coast, it's mostly off-road parks and camp in the parking lot or stay in hotel. We're visiting parks and campgrounds a lot though.
RTT
Pros: Affordable, I can afford the pay for the trailer now, RTT down the road. Can go offroad. I can use my REI basecamp tent in the meantime, but trailer frees up space, lets me carry my pop up screen porch, firewood, chairs, etc that would overfill the jeep. Can store in garage.
Cons: No potty and no shower, no A/C if we're summer camping with hookups, no heat in the winter, not much room if it's a rainy day.
Fiberglass RV
Pros: It's a house on wheels, insulated for extreme weather, better in bad weather, potty, shower, real walls and windows, better for road trips (no setup at a rest stop)
Cons: EXPENSIVE (3x the trailer/RTT), 1 year wait to get it built, can't offroad, more maintenance (winterizing, etc)
Tow vehicle: '15 Wrangler Rubicon with 35's, 4.10 gears, already have T3 brake controller and 7 pin connector installed.
Who: Me, 2 boys (aged 4 and 6), and momma
What: To go camping on and off the grid
Where: Right now, campgrounds in the Appalachians (no hookups mostly, but a camp spot with picnic table and fire ring). I'm military, so we could be stationed anywhere in the US and plan to explore the national parks in the future.
I don't really off-road with the camp gear yet- here on the east coast, it's mostly off-road parks and camp in the parking lot or stay in hotel. We're visiting parks and campgrounds a lot though.
RTT
Pros: Affordable, I can afford the pay for the trailer now, RTT down the road. Can go offroad. I can use my REI basecamp tent in the meantime, but trailer frees up space, lets me carry my pop up screen porch, firewood, chairs, etc that would overfill the jeep. Can store in garage.
Cons: No potty and no shower, no A/C if we're summer camping with hookups, no heat in the winter, not much room if it's a rainy day.
Fiberglass RV
Pros: It's a house on wheels, insulated for extreme weather, better in bad weather, potty, shower, real walls and windows, better for road trips (no setup at a rest stop)
Cons: EXPENSIVE (3x the trailer/RTT), 1 year wait to get it built, can't offroad, more maintenance (winterizing, etc)