montechie
Active member
From my experience a couple years four season camping in the Rockies/PNW with my own vertical popup OVRLND and friends with GFCs and Alucab wedges, and ask yourself some questions based on where and how you plan on using it:
- Pay attention to usable space when the top is open. Can someone use the "upstairs" while a 2nd person is "downstairs"? Can you get in and out of bed without disturbing your partner? How vertical are the sidewalls of the cap? If slanted you're going to feel more cramped vs vertical, but you may take a bigger mpg hit... (think Project M vs ATO), also vertical means the sleeping area will be wider.
- How convenient is putting away the sleeping area? Can you leave mattress, bedding, and maybe pillows up above? Will the bedding have to live in the bed with whatever else (muddy bikes, wet skis, dogs, etc)?
- How easy is it to insulate the hard walls, door, and any hatches? Is everything sandwiched composite or can you apply foam board etc to insulate?
- What custom options do they offer to match how you're going to live in the camper? Do you spend a lot of time in rain/snow/buggy areas and want a lot of light and fans to live inside? Or are you fine spending more time outside?
- Can you line the tent popup for winter with a 2nd barrier? Not as necessary with this Hardsider probably, but curious what they claim the R value is.
- How taught is the pop-up when deployed? My vertical OVRLND pop-up is better in the wind than any wedge style topper/RTT I've camped with as far as wall flap. Mostly because of the weight of the material and how tight they got that design. The Topo wedge of one friend was decent though and maybe equal, others I had to put up my double walls to drown out the sound of the flappy wedges in the wind. (Yes they were headed into the wind direction at bedtime, we're in the mountains, airflow changes hourly).
- How high is the cabover? Is the camper custom to your truck or general for the bedsize? Do you need to squeeze into and under brush/windfall/rock outcrops, etc?
- How heavy is their cap? Most are fairly light, but considering some simple truck caps are stupid heavy like SmartCaps, double check.