PhatPanda
Member
Dwellers are super heavy, otherwise if you are handy, worth the cost in my mind. The EOS and Arkto are listed at 3750 and 3600 dry, basically identical.
Sleeping with the roof down was a huge factor in deciding on a used EOS-12 we found. The Arkto for the base price is actually quite stripped down, once you add lithium (doesn't come standard), the inverter, solar, and winterization is becomes less of a good deal (there may be a slight 2024 price increase as well). The added convenience of true 4 season capability built in, wet bath, tricked out auto-leveling suspension, full Victron/Battleborn/Garmin and true percentage monitoring on tanks is icing on top.
I think Boreas should offer different layouts though on their EOS, as the lack of counter space and cabinet storage is the one weakness. The other weakness that is inherent to most trailers with outdoor kitchens are the built in propane stoves with the useless BTU rating of 7500 or less per burner, which is great for inside, but almost useless if there is any wind outside. I think it's tied to RV manufacturing safety rules for the US and Canada. The trailers that get it right use the Partner or Camp Chef stoves that output 10-20 BTU per burner.
There are a few Karavans used in the classifieds here, that is the ultimate use of space!
Sleeping with the roof down was a huge factor in deciding on a used EOS-12 we found. The Arkto for the base price is actually quite stripped down, once you add lithium (doesn't come standard), the inverter, solar, and winterization is becomes less of a good deal (there may be a slight 2024 price increase as well). The added convenience of true 4 season capability built in, wet bath, tricked out auto-leveling suspension, full Victron/Battleborn/Garmin and true percentage monitoring on tanks is icing on top.
I think Boreas should offer different layouts though on their EOS, as the lack of counter space and cabinet storage is the one weakness. The other weakness that is inherent to most trailers with outdoor kitchens are the built in propane stoves with the useless BTU rating of 7500 or less per burner, which is great for inside, but almost useless if there is any wind outside. I think it's tied to RV manufacturing safety rules for the US and Canada. The trailers that get it right use the Partner or Camp Chef stoves that output 10-20 BTU per burner.
There are a few Karavans used in the classifieds here, that is the ultimate use of space!