Heifer Boy
Adventurer
Many features that the industry has deemed necessary or required, simply are not and most folks that have long term or "expo"
related travels in mind could easily do without such features in order to shed weight and complexity.
A few items that my build left out, on purpose:
* two propane tanks > I only need one. The camper is insulated so well that even cooking multiple times a day and heating the cabin in sub freezing temps I can run for more than a month on one 20# cylinder.
*wet bath > not needed. We have a chemical toilet for time that we simply cannot or refuse to dig a hole or pee in a bush. "showers" are a simple matter or heating water and sponge bath. which takes us to...
*water heater > For what?? Showers no doubt. Never do you need it for anything else. All it does is add complexity and eat propane
*electric water pump > Nope. Marine grade foot pump = light weight, near maintenance free, and uses no electricity. Cheap too!
*microwave > for what?? Nope, dont need it. Robs too much battery, weighs a ton, and reduces the cabinet space in kitchen
* AC unit > Really? Most of the reason to be or live on the road is for the experience. Experience it, dont hide from it in a conditioned camper!
*large furnace > Nope. Robs tons of 12V, is noisy, and is heavy. We use an old school "gravity" furnace. Super light, near silent, and uses no 12V
*camper jacks > leave them at home. NEVER needed on the road. Just adds weight.
*heated tanks > not needed if built properly. Just adds weight, another 12v draw, and complexity. Keep the tanks within the heated cabin and you never need to heat them. Works 2 fold. Once the cabin and tanks are up to temp the tanks act as large heat sinks to help moderate interior temps.
Amen!!
I couldn't agree more with what you have said here and it is one of the few times I've seen anyone articulate it. The manufacturers are certainly catering to a market but often that market doesn't realise what's it's needs rather than wants. The Australian camper trailer market is going the same way. I believe that people are way over complicating camping these days and this just means everything gets bigger, heavier and more complicated to own and use. Camping used to be about getting away from the day to day and not bringing it with you.
For about the last 10 years I have been reversing this train of thought and have been very much simplifying my home to the point that I really don't have much that is not truly necessary. I'm certainly not a Luddite (worked in IT for about 20 years) and I like luxury and comfort (I do have a Tvan too) but it's about simplifying life. I don't need a mobile phone, a computer, an iPad and a smart TV when I'm camping so why do I need to have duplicate devices at home. The same applies to water and power needs and how you use these resources.
Simple is light on the environment, light in weight and light on the brain.
HB