MR E30
Well-known member
Exciting to see lots of details about other setups.
I built mine out over the course of 2 years, and I wanted to go truly lightweight, which meant no drawers or slides of any kind.
You can ditch the 40 series 8020 for the interior. Little 1" 10 series is more than strong enough.
If you have the option to ditch the backseat and fill it with stuff, like we did, then you free up so much space in the camper.
My wife and I have been living and working full-time in our 6ft Tacoma for a while now, and this is what our camper interior looks like on the day to day and while driving:
Back Door Camper Interior by Michael Rickerd, on Flickr
Back Door by Michael Rickerd, on Flickr
The list of things that we have is extensive, and it is all packed in there so well. I'm talking 335ah of battery, 20 gallons of water, 5 gallons of propane, 7 gallons of extra fuel, diesel heater with 2 gallon tank, 24/7 in-motion internet access anywhere on earth, backup cellular internet, AC/DC power, the ability to perform almost any maintenance/repair on the truck, to perform any service on a mountain bike or our adventure bike (R1250GSA). We each have full backpacking setups, the ability to descend hundreds of feet of vertical canyon walls, a dealership level diagnostic tool/computer, the list goes on and on.
My philosophy was to use the structure that was already there, adding as little extra framing/structure as possible, to get the job done. One of us can have a pot of water boiling on the stove, the awning deployed and the bed setup/opened in ~90 seconds.
Give it a lot of thought and you'll find success building exactly what you need to fit your comfort level and use case.
I built mine out over the course of 2 years, and I wanted to go truly lightweight, which meant no drawers or slides of any kind.
You can ditch the 40 series 8020 for the interior. Little 1" 10 series is more than strong enough.
If you have the option to ditch the backseat and fill it with stuff, like we did, then you free up so much space in the camper.
My wife and I have been living and working full-time in our 6ft Tacoma for a while now, and this is what our camper interior looks like on the day to day and while driving:
Back Door Camper Interior by Michael Rickerd, on Flickr
Back Door by Michael Rickerd, on Flickr
The list of things that we have is extensive, and it is all packed in there so well. I'm talking 335ah of battery, 20 gallons of water, 5 gallons of propane, 7 gallons of extra fuel, diesel heater with 2 gallon tank, 24/7 in-motion internet access anywhere on earth, backup cellular internet, AC/DC power, the ability to perform almost any maintenance/repair on the truck, to perform any service on a mountain bike or our adventure bike (R1250GSA). We each have full backpacking setups, the ability to descend hundreds of feet of vertical canyon walls, a dealership level diagnostic tool/computer, the list goes on and on.
My philosophy was to use the structure that was already there, adding as little extra framing/structure as possible, to get the job done. One of us can have a pot of water boiling on the stove, the awning deployed and the bed setup/opened in ~90 seconds.
Give it a lot of thought and you'll find success building exactly what you need to fit your comfort level and use case.