Truck and Camper, huh? It's a fine balance you want to put together here. The commonly held belief over on RV.net; truck camper forum is to purchase the camper first and then get a truck that will carry it. None of this is in any way like pulling a trailer, towing a rock crawler, or building up an off-road truck. I faced exactly your problem lo those 12 years ago when I bought a 2001.5 short bed, Xcab, Dodge CTD. Why that one? Because I knew this combination would outlive me. So far so good. It has the cast iron, bullet proof, 360 pound, NV5600, NV241HD (wide chain for snow plowing), D-60/D-80 (35 spline, full-floating) added Power Loc LSD, double secondary aux springs (over loads), Stable Loads, a few engine tweaks, 33x15.50R16 super singles on 12" wide wheels (so called, Redneck dualies) on the rear and 33x13.50's on stock wheels in front, 3" coil lift, frnt., Warn 15000 pound winch up front with a sturdy, lightweight, cobbled together Roo bar (bovine deflector), and a class V rr hitch.
I do take issue with those who say the cummins has no low end. Mine has grunt all the way down with a manual trans. I drove my brother's '99 F-250 (6 speed manual) and it would stall it every time I let out the clutch. No low end.
To be honest, i did buy this truck originally to flat-tow my rock crawler around, and I was buying the legendary Cummins.....oh, with some rather ill-fitting body parts attached. Alas the wheels/tires had a mind of their own on the R. C. and I had all kinds of trouble when towing. So, i bought a 7K pound gross car trailer that made my life a lot easier. Then I wanted to start camping at the trailhead in a modum of comfort. Enter the Lance Lite 165-s Xtracab truck camper. 1845 pounds, wet. It was a great match up. I call it the XTC. The newest same-size version by Lance is the 465? We actually off road the thing using my rock crawling techniques as a crossover. We've camped in it since '03 about 200 nights, including some very long trips. It is early enough to be able to use Mexican diesel. After about '06 when they started putting soot bags and xtra canisters on the exhaust, forget PeMex.
I would go over to RV.net, truck camper forum as it is THE place for info regarding your quandry. Here's a short vid of my rig doing the Mojave Road last March:
There is a whole technique with off-roading a truck camper. A whole new wierd area.
I would be into getting the best buy on a trimmed-down list of contenders that you can find within 500 miles of your place, be they Ford, Chevy, or Dodge. Also, always, always, always, get more truck than you think you will need. No one ever complains about having too much truck: Only too much camper. I have seen some good buys on a truck AND camper combination, which would eliminate the headache of getting the rig all set up. A truck camper is not for older folks. I'm right at the edge and the determining factor is can you climb the aluminum steps and can you climb up the two big steps to the bed in the middle of the night. Some folks run out of knees and time before they run out of camper.
Would I buy the same set up again? You bet I would. The Lance is one of the lightest, narrowest, least tall, full service, hard-side TC's you can get. The quiet factor beats every rag side camper ever made. I get 14-15 mpg with the camper on going 64 mph with little wind. It's a short bed and can turn in places that long beds have a woe with. I can park on the street or in a regular parking place and camp for the night and no one will bother us, even in the big city. I can get 500 miles on the diesel fuel i carry on the truck.
We recently had a discussion on RV.net TC section about how many miles anyone had on their TC's. There were lots of answers. I have 148K miles. Others had 225K, 315K miles and my neighbor has 378K miles on his 2001 CTD. Here's the thing; as we got longer in the mileage, the only people still reporting were Cummins owners. The Ford And Chevy people were long muted. That should tell you something.
My handle on RV.net is jefe4x4 and I've posted a lot of trip reports about the XTC. Next fall, my bride and I are planning a 4-month, clockwise, around the boundary states, romp around the US taking our time and visiting all four corners of the United States. We will take advantage of our Golden Geezer pass, staying at N.F. campgrounds, Wetlands, Corps of Engineers camps, county campgrounds, state campgrounds, fishery and wildlife areas camps, private campgrounds, also stealth camping in and around some of the bigger cities, and getting a luxo hotel about once a week. We'll hit the N.E. during leaf peeper time, and work our way down the E. Coast and eventually back to CA the hard way. One of our goals is to camp on every beach (right on the sand) area that is permitted. There are quite a few. I carry on-board air and do play with the air pressure when on the dunes. DUNES? Yes, we have run the pressure on our high-float tires down to 20 pounds rear, and 22 pounds front and float right on the blowsand. Don't try that at 80 pounds! Whoda thunk with a 10,000 pound rig you could run the dunes. On the way down from Coyote Flats in the Sierra Nevada last month;
regards, as always, jefe