It sounds like I ran a similar set-up to what you run now. We had a RTT on the top of a Jeep Wrangler and used it for dry camping all over southern Utah. It was either take the RTT off between trips (royal PITA) or buy a new cover for it every season (got expensive in a hurry). Once the dogs and our crap was all loaded up we got really cramped. I even ended up building a trailer to help give us more room, but that came with its own set of problems. With the van its already loaded, ready to go minus, the cooler and dogs.
I hope I can sell her on it. I think part of it is she thinks Vans are creepy.
My wife was the hardest part of making the changeover. The sell on the van was difficult until she got a tour/ ride in her bosses Sportsmobile..........then she was totally sold.
20 mpg would be better then I can get in the Tacoma loaded down !!
We realistically get 15-18 MPG out of our AWD express, loaded or not it really doesn't seem to make a difference.
I swear MPG is one area you can take the most honest trustworthy person and they will stretch the truth, sometimes a lot. Our previous rig dipped solidly into the single digits, was cramped and had a 55 MPH top speed (4 cylinder) when loaded for a four day weekend. Being able to run 75 MPH, get to where the fun is fast and still get mid teens MPG has been awesome!
I'm more so worried about driving such a large vehicle day to day, I'm guessing I will get use to it but have never owned anything so large before.
I know you are looking at Fords with the RB but consider this: Comparing a Chevy extended cab, short box truck to a Chevy Express short wheelbase you only have a 2" longer wheelbase but bumper to bumper you are 3" shorter. Physically a van is similar to a truck, I think they feel huge sitting inside them because of the big interior.
I love the way the Ford vans look and as much as I want a U joint 4wd van I know I can live without 4wd. My basic plan would be a Weld tech lift some bigger tires and some sort of LSD in the rear for some of the sandy roads
Honestly a set of aggressive tires, LSD/ locker would get me through almost everything I would want to get through in the back country with a 2WD. I think in the 4500ish miles I drove offroad on various trips last year I engaged 4x4high twice (only needed it once) and put it into 4x4 low once to get through up a canyon I had no business going down traveling solo.
I know you are looking at Econolines but I would strongly suggest considering an AWD Express! AWD has gotten me down rougher trails than I thought it would. Its always engaged so you just kinda cruise through stuff without having to stop and engage/ disengage the front end. I found our van and it was very comparable in price to any of the 2WD vans I was finding. Best part is it was ready to go out of the box without spending time or $7000+ converting it. That’s a lot of money you could be out enjoying the van with
Just a few random thoughts from the first few months of van ownership:
- Stealth camping/ privacy with a van has been nice. There have been times where we were super exhausted on the way home we pulled into a Walmart/ rest area/ truck stop to grab a few hours of sleep to make it safely back. Being in an enclosed vehicle is quieter and has a safety factor is nice.
- Rain don't bother me much anymore! Folding up a wet RTT sucks and gets your bedding wet, which sucks on a multi day trip.
- Wind. Yeah the van rocks a little bit when it really blows, but it doesnt feel like your going to be blown off the face of the earth. I have spent more than one sleepless night in the west desert sleeping in the front seat instead of the RTT
- Cold weather camping enjoyable now! Haven't even have the heater installed yet and there is a HUGE difference between an lightly insulated van and a tent.
- Much easier for a dog to hop into a van themselves, RTT's and doggies suck.
- No more ladder! My wife has hip/ back problems and is vertically challenged and has hated that ladder from day one!
- Night time, half asleep, potty breaks climbing down a ladder are no more!
- Going #2 is way more private with a porta-potty inside the van.
- Breaking down/ setting up camp is almost instantaneous!
- Once you get past the stigmas attached to being a van owner we realized they are pretty comfortable, practical vehicles.
- The short wheelbase chevy van we have feels cavernous inside. Our intention is to keep is a simple lay out and still pack like we are in a Jeep, if we didn't need it with the jeep we sure don't need it now. Just because you have the extra room doesn't mean we have to fill it with pointless crap.
- Daily driving is actually just fine now that I am use to it. The higher seating position gives you a good view of whats ahead. Stock you sit higher than a significantly lifted truck. My van only has rear windows so backing up is a little bit more of a pain, but using the mirrors works just fine, I am use to it. Plus a little planning or parking a few stalls farther from the door solves that problem.
- Parking garages. If I took off the ladder rack that is up top i would fit in my parking garage at work!
- AWD, factory locking rear diff, 2-3" lift has surprised me where it will go. If I want to go "rock crawling" I can just tow my trail jeep behind us and take that on the hard trails in Moab.
- Aftermarket support. The AWD express has almost none, the Econoline has tons. I enjoy fabrication so either way i would be making most of my own parts, but sometimes its nice to have something to copy
Just some thoughts from somebody who just made the jump to a fullsize van! (sorry for the novel!)