I guess I'm saying it's more than looks. It appeals to us on a core level as a result of several generations of people associating tents with adventure and being outdoors.So the whole tread was a set up !
Good one.
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OK, I'm an engineer, and I believe form follows function. You can make something both functional and beautiful, but it takes an effort. I think I pulled off both in building this pop-top from scratch. I am a bit bias though, having worked on it for two years. It's extremely light, compact when driving, and spacious when popped (8ft tall inside).Odd conclusion. Looks never entered my mind; they all look like dad jeans. And in comparison between the popups and the minimalists like the Scout and not a Lance with slideouts, it's kind of irrelevant. Both have ligher weights, doors that are small, cramped insides, etc, and all because a few inches or pounds here or there matter. In my bazillion years camping I've never heard anyone—until now—find any popup, whether it be trailer, truck camper, or full sized van say they were about looks. Except for the old VWs. But hey, at least someone thinks my rig looks cool now.
Height for off-road seems to be a real thing but off-road is still limited with the weight of a camper. In my opinion if you're really going off-road then a pop up canopy would be the solution for sleeping in your vehicle.
So it's a looks thing. And also the windows are in the wrong place on a popup. Ha Ha. With the lack of popup camper marketing, there must be something inherent in the archetypal appeal of a tent in the outdoors that the pop up offers.
Thanks for your well thought out reply. I would never argue against anything you are saying and you clearly have a specific use case.Because you just...won't...listen. Ha. You ask why people choose a pop-up over hard sided and if it's a look thing, then receive pages of answers and examples of why people choose pop-ups over hard sided (none of which were for looks) and then make a conclusion ("So it's a looks thing") that is the opposite of all the input you received. Ha.
I disagree with your above opinion that "if you're really going offroad then a pop up canopy would be the solution for sleeping in your vehicle". As outlined in my response, we drive trails when on long out-of-state trips and in our local Montana mountains that hard sided will not fit in. And, we do not want to overland in a pop-up canopy or rooftop tent as we like the insulation (from weather, cold/heat, dust, etc.), furnace, plumbing, water tank, instant hot water, etc. in our OEV CAMP-X. It is the perfect solution for us since it will let us get down tight trails with rock overhangs and tree-branches that a hard sided will not yet still is a full enclosure with all the comforts that we want in our camper and light/robust enough to do rough trails (South Draw Road in Capitol Reef, White Rim Road in Canyonlands, and other medium rated trails/roads). We have no interest, these days, in canopy or roof top tents. A pop-up camper is what provides the amenities we want (compared to canopy and rooftop tents) yet is compact and light enough to get down all the trails we frequent (hard sides campers are not).
I respect that for your use, you might have a different opinion on what is best or satisfactory, but please realize that everyone has different wants and needs and so maybe this thread was doomed from the beginning. Or maybe I'm just not following why you seem to have a predetermined outcome/opinion that there is no valid use-case for a pop-up camper except looks.
Again:
Not a looks thing; it's a function thing.
Pop-ups will fit the places we go (tight trails, parking garages, home garage) where hard sided will not.
Canopy/rooftop tents don't provide the amenities we want (insulation, plumbing, water tank, furnace, instant hot water heater, etc.)
You are asking on the wrong forum. I would venture that most respondents here bought their camper for its utility, to fit their style of camping and their bank account.This thread was really intended to try and understand the overall market trend and popularity of popups . . .
Makes sense although I'm not sure a more appropriate forum exists. I appreciate the concentration of people here that are willing the nerd out on these topics.You are asking on the wrong forum. I would venture that most respondents here bought their camper for its utility, to fit their style of camping and their bank account.