Overkill Campers

Obsessed2findARuggedHybid

Well-known member
Or just " trust and verify" and do not give a small direct to customer mfger 75% down 60 days before build starts. That is absolutely ridiculous.

I agree with maybe DIY ers but off an RV lot no way
 

DRAX

Active member
Reading their IG post makes my blood boil and I don't even have any skin in the game. They need to be sued out of existence and the owners need some prison time for fraud. When we were trailer shopping a little over a year ago I came across some videos on their trailers and we really liked their design/layout but as part of our research we found all of the horror stories about lies, delays, poor build quality, etc and quickly removed them from the list.

I feel bad for anyone that gave them money, hopefully you'll eventually be made whole again.
 

DFNDER

Active member
Reading their IG post makes my blood boil and I don't even have any skin in the game. They need to be sued out of existence and the owners need some prison time for fraud. When we were trailer shopping a little over a year ago I came across some videos on their trailers and we really liked their design/layout but as part of our research we found all of the horror stories about lies, delays, poor build quality, etc and quickly removed them from the list.

I feel bad for anyone that gave them money, hopefully you'll eventually be made whole again.
 

DFNDER

Active member
Man, this is awful, and makes me so appreciate having bought from a company that only required a very small deposit for an expensive trailer. These large deposit deals are just so risky. I’m amazed at the tone deaf nature of their communications, or why anyone would trust them ever again.
 

Spider7565

New member
To the interested buyers and those who have given Overkill Campers LLC a deposit, you rate an update to the posts, replies, and passion on this thread...

A few final thoughts from me and the Expedition Portal community can decide for themselves:

1. There is no arguing the passion, ingenuity, and work ethic of Dave Poe and his team. They love the industry, love overlanding, love the community, and have a genuine desire to manufacture a unique and capable product. Dave, his family, and his team are the type of individuals you'd love to camp with and have a beer. Overkill Campers LLC is comprised of and run by passionate people with creative minds.

2. The passionate, creative minds of Overkill Campers LLC are horrible business people with terrible communication skills and a flawed business model. It's one thing to take every aspect of your product and manufacturing process to the limit (overkill). It's another thing to use the deposits of paying customers to reinvent industry standards. Dave used Boeing as an example in his post. The aviation industry is one I'm intimately familiar with so I'll follow that thread as an example. When Boeing sets about designing a new plane or a new piece of a plane to perform better than the competition and the industry standard, they use their own research and development dollars (partially funded by investors and the consumer, true), but at no point does their R&D effort or investment prevent them from meeting customer orders for new planes they've contractually obligated to meet in components, avionics packages, and timeline. To give an Overkill example: they started off by using the industry standard for quality offroad trailer suspensions, Timbren. What's wrong with Timbren? Overkill found something their awesome, creative minds could improve upon and set about reinventing the wheel. They sunk customer deposits into inventing a new suspension and diverted time, effort, and resources into the project. All of this was at the expense to customer wait time and their own financial ability to manage sunk costs, mitigate supply chain delays, etc. How many trailers were delayed in the process? Did the customer sign a contract for Timbren axles or Overkill's proprietary design? Did Overkill tell the consumer they were changing the terms of their contract by installing a new, unproven but "probably" better axle? The same can be said for their expansion efforts into MARS truck campers (deny it if you want, but a joint venture in Prescott was the plan) and ROAM rentals. Expanding your business before you have the capacity to meet current customer demand, with a standardized product that is bulletproof, isn't a business model for success. Hats off to Overkill for having the courage to reinvent the wheel, but the customer shouldn't bear the risk to timeline and end product. I certainly didn't know my money was being gambled in that fashion on numerous other inventions until it was much too late.

3. Quality control is an evolving process. I truly hope Overkill's newest S.O.510's and checklist have solved all the issues I had with my trailer. As an update to my last post, here is a brief list of this issues I experienced:
--Off-gassing resulting in bubbling and warping of the laminate. Contrary to Dave's remarks, this wasn't superficial and cosmetic. The laminate in the walls and ceiling warped to the point water leaked in from the corners of the cabin and Fantastic Fan side seals on the roof.
--Every slide out with the exception of the bed slide (fridge, kitchen, rear Zarges box slides, and table) broke or came loose. The slides are affixed using rivets that are too small for the forces of a bumpy dirt road, let alone actual overlanding. Again, in the aviation industry we use rivets twice the size as Overkill for this very reason. When every other part is strong, but the rivet is the size of a ten-penny nail, it's going to fail every time. Mine did. I replaced 90% of the rivets on my slide outs.
--The rear cabinet tray broke at the hinge weld, resulting in an uneven cabinet system and all of the Zarges box slides, table, and electrical components to drop about two inches below the intended, level spot. This was due to an inadequate weld and two and a half points of attachment when there was supposed to be four.
--Complete electrical system failure. This was a slow (nine months to a year), annoying process that resulted in countless troubleshooting hours, wire by wire. This issue was never resolved (by me), but I believe the main bus to be the issue (no way to know for sure since it's a sealed bus, riveted to the side of the trailer, without a fuse or "tripped" indicator). What started as intermittent "flickering" of power eventually degraded to zero power (except for running and brake lights) for the last two months I had possession of the trailer; no water pump, no lights, no refrigerator, no fan; nothing but a $40,000, 3500# hard-side tent with storage.
--The aluminum cargo boxes on the front of the trailer weren't sealed correctly and filled with water when it rained. It took me about three tubes of silicon sealant to make them somewhat water tight.
--Every door latch mechanism failed. Overkill has changed their latch system, so I hope new customers won't experience this as well, but my latches failed, resulting in one inch gaps in the slide doors, hatches, and boxes; not ideal for an "offroad" trailer in dust, mud, and inclement weather.

I revived this thread a few months ago out of frustration with a company who'd ceased all communication in what was, at the time, a private dispute between customer and manufacturer. I've never posted to any forum in this manner and I don't give customer reviews, good or bad. When Overkill wouldn't respond to phone calls, emails, or texts I was left with this forum or the legal process while concurrently moving across the country with my family. I think it says everything you need to know about Overkill's customer service by the fact they would only respond when I posted on this forum and highlighted their inadequacies. They didn't respond to me. Their response was the post Dave left in the thread above; not a phone call or letter to me personally or a renewed plan to make it right. In the end, I drove to Overkill's shop in Bend from SoCal, dropped off the trailer, and negotiated a refund from Dave; contrary to the original promise of a new trailer I left with a signed agreement for a partial refund. That was in July, it's now mid-September and I haven't seen a penny...but I guess the check's in the mail.
...final update, since a lot of other forum members have had the same experience as me: I never got the full deposit back from Overkill as per our mutual, signed agreement. I requested arbitration through the Better Business Bureau, but Overkill refused to respond to the BBB. I eventually sued Overkill and received a favorable judgment for the full cost of the trailer, plus legal fees. It is very worrying to see what Overkill is in the process of doing now. Their model is the definition of a ponzi scheme.
 

sn_85

Observer
Or just " trust and verify" and do not give a small direct to customer mfger 75% down 60 days before build starts. That is absolutely ridiculous.

I agree with maybe DIY ers but off an RV lot no way

Honestly it's getting harder and harder everyday to know who to trust. Even a brand like Turtleback that had a lot of clout in this industry is looking like it's going under. There are still some brands that distribute to RV lots. While I'm not always a fan of RV lot trailers at least you know if they have on stock inventory you won't get shafted. There are a few decent trailers like the Boreas XT or Mission Overland ones that are sold via RV lots. I would have not issue with buying either one of those trailers off an RV lot. At least with those if its on the lot I can bring it home that very same day.
 
  • Like
Reactions: EPO

Obsessed2findARuggedHybid

Well-known member
Obsolutly. When you said rv lot I was thinking more like General RV or the like. If you can find a quality brand from a reputable off road dealer you will have less risk but in most cases you will pay a bit more. Catch 222
 

DRAX

Active member
I can't comment on other brands, but when we were trailer shopping one of the areas I was looking into were the businesses themselves, the top 2 on our list at the time were Bean and Off Grid Trailers. I also spoke with owners about their experiences pre- and post-sale rather than relying on each company's marketing skills.

Back to my point, both Bean and Off Grid Trailers are part of larger companies. Bean is a subsidiary of Sterling ATM and OGT was acquired by a private equity firm back in 2017, the same firm acquired Northern Lite campers and from 2017-2022 they were under the same umbrella as Escape Trailers as well as a boat mfr. After successfully helping these companies to grow the private equity firm divested from Northern Lite and OGT, both now fall under the entity "Outdoor Adventure Group" which is owned by TriWest (Their other brands are listed at TriWest | Portfolio )

The point I'm ultimately try to make is that companies like these tend to avoid the operational pitfalls of being individual small businesses that lack access to capital and people with skills needed to help them to succeed while trying to get off the ground. I know OGT has a past and some distant relation to Mission Overland, IIRC, but that's pretty common among small, niche companies trying to figure things out early on.

This isn't a slight against the small companies in the least, but when making large purchases I have to take long-term sustainability into account as warranty/support are worthless if the company can't meet their obligations or they go out of business soon after purchase. Taking a risk on a $400 (or even $4,000) product from a small company is quite different than a $40k product. The timing and amount of a deposit needed for a custom order is also telling, if they want 50% or more up-front then that's a hard pass as well. A minimal deposit to get your place in line and get production started is totally fine and expected.

That's why Overkill simply wasn't an option. Between owner complaints about poor build quality and non-existent support combined with the poor attitude of the owner and the huge deposit up-front it was a quick "no." They could make the most awesome trailer on the planet and still fail as a business for the reasons mentioned.
 

DFNDER

Active member
Having worked for PE owned companies, I wouldn’t take that as a given that a company will be around in the future. They are just as likely to wreck the place and sell it for parts, or merge it into oblivion as they are to help the company prosper. They also can sometimes lose the personal care and commitment of the small business owner. Pluses and minuses to each. I put a lot of value on a privately owned company that knows how to make money on the limited number of trailers they can sell and doesn’t use customer deposits to fund anything but the customer’s build. There are a few out there that know what they are doing.
 

DRAX

Active member
Well, this is interesting. Directly from Bard this morning:

View attachment 777027

This seems...not accurate. Their website is down? No, it's not. The company name is "Overkill Campers" and not "Overkill Trailers" so there may be some bad AI logic involved in the results as well.

Without seeing the actual, public bankruptcy filing or a reference to it this is just AI word vomit.
 

OregonLC

Observer
That there's a specific filing date lends credibility to it been true. And it seems to align with everything that's transpired.

Is there some kind of corporate bankruptcy search that can be done?
 

DRAX

Active member
That there's a specific filing date lends credibility to it been true. And it seems to align with everything that's transpired.

Is there some kind of corporate bankruptcy search that can be done?

OVERKILL CAMPERS LLC Bend OR, 97702 - Company Profile (cortera.com) shows no recent public record alerts for bankruptcy or anything else. The AI stuff is fun, but in its current state should be taken with a grain of salt unless it provides actual references to the "facts" it's providing.
 

OregonLC

Observer
Fair enough. I do use AI professionally and understand it's limitations. While it's often times very bad, with practice you can tend to sort through it's suppositions vs. fact. Things like specific dates it doesn't make up and pulls from a specific reference. There had to be some information to point it to a specific filing date and amount.

Regardless, I deleted the post until it can be proven.

Edit: after asking Bard a bunch of questions to try to find specifics, it replied with this. High on artificial, low on intelligence I supppose.

1683222108117.png
 
Last edited:

PNW_PW

New member
Just looking at the Overkill FB page after reading about the new partnership here and it appears that the agreement has been terminated before production started. I wonder what will happen to the deposits for the new production that isn't going to happen...

I looked at Overkill last year when we were looking to order a small off road trailer to tow with our jeep. Between the spotty communication, huge deposits and people who had paid but had no camper and very little hope of being made whole, it was very easy to move on. I'm glad this thread exists as it likely saved me from moving forward and ignoring the initial 'minor' red flags I felt.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
188,023
Messages
2,901,289
Members
229,411
Latest member
IvaBru
Top