Optimistic Paranoid
Observer
I've just bought a 2012 F250 and I'm planning to put a DCU shell from either ARE or Century on the back.
On a different forum I frequent, some body posted the following comment on them:
"I have an ARE DCU on my Ram 2500. I also had one on my previous F350. I love them for working out of. I’ve also insulated and paneled my current one so it makes a pretty decent camper, too. But they definitely don’t hold up well to twisting forest roads. They flex too much and it cracks the aluminum right next to the welds. And I’m not talking about rough four wheeling, just the normal driving up rutted forest roads that we all do."
I was hoping owners of such shells here might be able to comment on this before I lay out a bunch of money. How are they holding up for you?
(BTW, I happen to know that the guy who posted that is a plumber, and I expect that his truck has the built in toolboxes loaded down with a lot of weight. Possibly that might explain his issues. I'm planning on just the sliding windows, myself.)
Anyway, thanks for any responses.
Regards
John
On a different forum I frequent, some body posted the following comment on them:
"I have an ARE DCU on my Ram 2500. I also had one on my previous F350. I love them for working out of. I’ve also insulated and paneled my current one so it makes a pretty decent camper, too. But they definitely don’t hold up well to twisting forest roads. They flex too much and it cracks the aluminum right next to the welds. And I’m not talking about rough four wheeling, just the normal driving up rutted forest roads that we all do."
I was hoping owners of such shells here might be able to comment on this before I lay out a bunch of money. How are they holding up for you?
(BTW, I happen to know that the guy who posted that is a plumber, and I expect that his truck has the built in toolboxes loaded down with a lot of weight. Possibly that might explain his issues. I'm planning on just the sliding windows, myself.)
Anyway, thanks for any responses.
Regards
John