An ECOBOOST Family Overland F-150 FX4

Drewnobi

Member
Background: After a number of years thinking about the best camping solution for our family of 5 (+ 2 large pups) and going through a few different setups, our solution seemed to land on a full size crew cab truck. We've camped out of a Honda Pilot (which this truck replaced) a minivan, and most recently, a small Ford Transit Connect van with a bed platform and roof top tent. There is my wife and I, we've been adventuring outdoors together for 20 years, in recreational and professional (as guides and outdoor educators) capacities and we have three kids, 13, 10, and 8, and 2 dogs, a standard poodle and medium size lab mix. We love dispersed camping, mountain biking, hiking, mild off-roading, and being away from the (growing) crowds. I've had full size trucks before but never a crew cab big enough for all the humans. The dogs will have their space in the camper shell. We live just a few miles away from Pike National Forest in Colorado.

The Truck:
2018 F150 XLT Super Crew, 5.5ft bed, 2.7L Ecoboost, 10 speed auto, 36 gallon tank, FX4 package, Ruby Red.

I think this is the best F150 configuration for this use case. MPG, range, capability (FX4 includes rear locker), payload are all great. I picked this one up with 33,000 miles. The only other competitor I really looked at was the Tundra, but in the end, price, ecoboost/MPG, factory locker and availability led me here:

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Our backcountry camping set up (always in progress):
We have always camped out of ground tents. We bought an REI Base Camp 6 when my oldest was born, and still used it until this summer. I picked up a Tepui RTT a couple years ago for $100 from a wealthy college student whose Mom had bought it for her, and she just wanted to get rid of it. We've integrated that into a few of our set ups. Having smaller vehicles, if we want the doggos to come we have had to take two cars. The kids are old enough to sleep in their own tent, or vehicle at times. I built a chuck box a few years back that has served us well. I bought a Gazelle T4 Overland Edition midway through this past summer after realizing that sleeping in our little van + RTT wasn't cutting it. I realized that sleeping on the ground (on this) in a spacious tent that you can stand up in and don't have to climb a ladder is great. My girls love the RTT and they can have it. The Gazelle beats or matches the set up time of just about any roof top tent. We loved it so much we bought a second one for the kids. I can give them the tent, a duffle of sleeping bags/pads and they can set up on their own. Those of you who camp with kids understand the mental and temporal burden of packing, setting up, taking down, storing away gear for extra people. It's a disincentive to get out the door. Add an igloo cooler, an Alps Mountaineering Guide table, a 20 year old coleman 2 burner, some food totes, and that's our kit.

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Our Van/RTT/Ground tent setup:
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Van drawers + sleeping platform:
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Double ground tent setup (I have a second Gazelle T4 to replace the traditional tent):
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What we plan to do with the rig:
  1. Drive it around town
  2. Drive it on road trips
  3. Go to Home Depot and put stuff in the back (aka Truck Stuff)
  4. Take it on Camping/MTB trips
  5. Do mild off-road trails in Colorado and the West
  6. Take it on off road trails and then camp out for like, 2 weeks. (aka Overlanding)
  7. Sleep in the back (just the wife and I, when the kids are with PePaw)
  8. Park it in the garage ?:
IMG_4383.JPG IMG_4382.JPG IMG_0075.jpg*see next post for camper shell

Opinions, values, and compromises that will guide this build:
Having had a long career where I have made money teaching people outdoor skills, I find the Overlanding trend a little odd. We used to just call it car camping. Now it seems like it's just car camping with maxtrax. I really appreciate the guys on the Overland Journal podcast and their perspective on this. "Overland" seems to be a marketing term with little real meaning. I certainly don't claim any authentic connection to the term, but I take my outdoor recreation seriously and thoughtfully and I don't like being sold bunkum. Why do I want a vehicle to go out and explore the wild public lands of the West? It fits my age and life stage. In our pre-kid days we would just strap on our backpacks and head out on foot, or load down our bikes and pedal on. A truck like this gets us and our family to the places we want to go, and provides that remote wildland experience for our kids. So I won't be looking for stuff that just looks cool and has no purpose, or takes away from the 90% of this trucks life that could be accomplished by a Corolla. I think I'm in the right place for that kind of thing.

I really need to fit this thing in the garage. As you can see, I have a very small few inches of height to spare, so that will limit me. I will mount a Yakima cargo box and wire basket when we head out.

I don't have a crap-ton of money to throw at this. My wife and I make decent money, but it can't all go to this truck. Lean and mean, run-what-ya-brung.

Why I'm posting here:
This may go without saying, but I'm looking for like-minded folks and helpful advice. I've lurked on many-a-forum and hope to now contribute. Youtube seems to be just for selling stuff, and Instagram is just for pretty pictures (NGL I will try to post pretty pictures to IG), Facebook is hot garbage. But I'm really just looking for a place to document the build and (MOSTLY) the adventures we have in it.

I'll update the next post with mods I've done so far. I think that's how this is supposed to work.
 

phsycle

Adventurer
One “mod” to consider, considering you have kids and dogs—rear seat coverdog “hammock”. I’ve used it with good success.


Duluth makes some too, but never used it.

Nice choice. I had a ‘15 2.7 with 36 gallon tank. Range was incredible. Much more powerful than my old Toyota V8.
 

Drewnobi

Member
One “mod” to consider, considering you have kids and dogs—rear seat coverdog “hammock”. I’ve used it with good success.


Duluth makes some too, but never used it.

Nice choice. I had a ‘15 2.7 with 36 gallon tank. Range was incredible. Much more powerful than my old Toyota V8.


Rear seat covers are for sure on the list. Dogs will mostly be in the camper shell, but my kids are messier than the dogs by far. :LOL:
 

Martinjmpr

Wiffleball Batter
Looks very similar to my setup except mine has the 3.5 EB. Great truck though!

Win-doors are a total game changer, can't believe it's taken me 30+ years of pickup ownership to finally get around to getting win-doors.

For seat covers I would NOT recommend the Cover King / Skanda seat covers. I have them and I don't like the way they fit. The back seat covers are OK but the front ones are single piece and no matter how much pushing, pulling and tucking I do they still have large gaps on the edges that are uncovered.

Funny that you mention the garage. I had mine in the garage for about 3 months but it's now back outside. Like yours, mine just BARELY cleared the garage door when parked!

The problem with putting my truck in the garage is that I have a small workshop in there and it makes it difficult to do anything else with the garage as the truck is so wide it takes up enough space that it's difficult to get around in there and use the "work space." So I've reluctantly gone back to parking in the driveway while the wife's CR-V and my motorcycle stay in the garage (but on the plus side, I now have room for another motorcycle!)

If you don't have them already, get floor liners. I like Husky better than Weather Tech but they're all good. Makes it much easier to clean the interior and it also means that a spill of some sticky liquid is not the anxiety-inducing event it would be if it went onto carpet.

Also if you want to put anything on that little dash pocket that sits above the radio, Builtright Industries sells a very cool metal platform that you can bolt in. I put my 2 meter Ham radio there but it would also work for a GPS, phone, tablet, etc.

Another BuiltRight industries product you can get is a back seat release. This allows you to easily access the area behind the driver's side back seat for a little stealthy storage.

I see you have the fender liners and tailgate assist, I put those on mine as well.
 

Drewnobi

Member
Luckily I have a 2.5 car garage, so my truck on on the side right next to the wall, and the daily driver is on the other side with the work bench, tool wall, bike storage, fridge etc.

I just got my Husky Floor Liners yesterday, great coverage.

I like the idea of the over mount above the radio, but this truck has carplay, which works with Gaia GPS, so I will play that out to see how it works. Otherwise I might be getting an Ipad mount.
 

Todd n Natalie

OverCamper
Good looking truck. I'm jealous it can fit in your garage. Technically mine could, but, I'd have to empty everything else out of the garage and it would block the man door. So it lives outside.
 

obxtiger

Member
Nice truck. Like the red. I looked hard for a red one but none available with 6.5 bed. Had to settle for white. I recently added my shell set up and a little something extra Topper EZ Lift. 1st topper i've ever added. love it so far. I can stay loaded for spur of the moment trips.newest 125.jpgwheels 050.jpg
 
D

Deleted member 9101

Guest
If you really want your 2.7 to shine.... Toss a custom tune on it. Promise you that you'll love it!
 
D

Deleted member 9101

Guest
Say more. I know tunes exist but I don't know much more. I'm keen on MPG, and so far, this truck has plenty of power...

Well...a tune won't increase your fuel economy....buuuut once you add larger tires with more aggressive tread it will restore the lost performanceamd fuel economy. They also help when towing.

I have three for my 2.7. The first is an adaptive daily tune, makes more power and I can use any grade fuel I want. The second is an adaptive towing tune, just like the first tune I can use any grade fuel available. The third is a 93 octane "performance tune" that takes advantage of the mods I have done (intake, down pipe, intercooler, throttle body) and makes quite a bit more power. It took about 6 rounds of data logging to get it perfect. If I want to shut down a buddy who has an inflated sense of how fast his car/truck is, I load the 93 performance tune and commence to bring them back to reality. Then I load the adaptive tune and drive home...haha.

My brother uses a towing tune when he's off road. It makes a ridiculous amount of low end power and holds the gears for longer. Makes a very noticable difference.

Tunes are fun and if you work with a company like 5 Stat or Brew City Boost they'll taylor it for your wants/needs.
 

WRONG_WAY_DAVE

Active member
Nice ride, and can appreciate your situation.

From the pic, it appears you have 1 inch of room F150 roof bars to door strike? But for future mods, a 1-inch taller tire will net only 1/2 inch raise in overall ride height (front & rear), and Bilstein makes pre-install adjustable F150 5100 shocks ($250-300 for fronts) that can raise the nose 1 inch, 2 inch, etc. and since that is only in the front, the rise to your roof-rack in the rear will be minimal...

If you have factory/extended warranty, just be cautious with tunes as depending on dealership/Service Manager it can be problematic. YMMV...

Keep us posted ~!!
 

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