We've been toying with the idea of selling our VW Camper and moving to a truck camper or trailer. We would really like to make the truck camper work, but recognize that there will be trade offs. We recently purchased a new 17 Titan XD diesel to replace our aging 04 Tundra and would be using it as a base for our camper build. We really love the truck and felt it a great "middle ground" in capabilities vs going to a full 3/4 ton.
If we go the truck camper route we would be looking at hawk model, or possibly a shell model to transfer over some of our camping gear from the van, as our van does not have the westy interior. If money were no object, a Norweld flatbed and Hawk flatbed model camper would be on order.... Working on it, but haven't been able to sell the wife on that one just yet....
My estimated load going with either a flatbed or regular Hawk model has us sitting at around 1928/ 1953 lbs wet and with passengers. Thats 1050/1075 for the camper, 312 for added options, 166 for water, and 400 for passengers. Our rated payload per the door sticker is 1850 lbs, so before adding any other gear or food, we are already over the payload rating. When you add in our food, tools, clothes, recovery gear etc. we could easily gain another 200-1000 lbs. We figure our current setup is around 500 lbs. This would have us overloaded but not by enough to make me uncomfortable. But add in heavy bumpers, winches, fuel carriers, bikes, canoes, etc. it could easily hit or exceed the 1000 lbs over payload. Going with the shell model is a wash in my opinion as we would still add certain options and with a starting weight of 875 to 975 your not saving much when you add it all up. Is running 500 to 1000 lbs over payload totally unsafe?....I don't know for sure... Sure airbags could be added...or we could all just drive 1 ton dually 4x4's....
Not sure the best answer as all of our situations are different.
We love the ease of parking the van and ease of setup by being able to jump from the driver seat to the rear to pop the top and get the kids out of the car seats. But thats when it gets tough. The car seats have to be unlatched to make the lower bed. and all items stowed behind the rear seat have to be moved. We set up a small 2 man tent to stow the car seats, clothing bags, and other miscellaneous stuff that clutters up the van. It only takes a few minutes to setup, but in the end adds to the packing/ unpacking routine and hampers stealth type camping. Sure we can move this stuff to the front seats, but then we have limited living space as a result.
In our case moving to the truck camper would really give us several benefits over the VW van. I look at setup time as being easier with the truck camper, as our goal would be to keep the floor space clean and utilize built in storage, so no moving boxes or containers etc. before going to bed or using the space. Poping the top and setting up the awning is probably a wash, maybe slight advantage for the van. Not having to move car seats and the other travel related kids stuff would be huge, as it could, all stay in the cab of the truck. The main thing that really seals the deal for us is the truck is a modern vehicle with ice cold air, hot heat and comfortable seats. The truck also has the ability to maintain speed on the highway. The van has no air con, little heat and with only 48 hp is not able to get much over 60mph on the flat. The XD has to be by far the most comfortable vehicle i have ever road tripped in. Who ever designed the seats deserves a serious award. I have lower back pain in just about every vehicle i have driven and in the Titan XD, have done over 1k miles in a day with no issues. The truck also has 4wd and low miles meaning we can feel safer taking less maintained roads and do so without the worry of the breakdowns that could happen when driving the VW. Add to this the van is a third vehicle, and I typically need a truck for work anyway, so going to the truck camper would leave us one less vehicle to maintain and insure.
-Kim