More storage in camp x than FWC? Will wiring for solar be an issue? Looks good?
It has about the same as our FWC hawk shell with side dinette. It's just in different spots. Our storage on the FWC included: under both seats of the side dinette, small cabinet on front passenger-side corner. Our two tubs (food and pots/pans) would sit on the floor when we traveled and on the drivers-side shell bench when set up. A standard hawk would have the storage drawers in the drivers-side cabinet. There is a cubby by the door for a portable toilet or storage.
The CampX has a cabinet by the rear door with a sliding drawer for a portable toilet or other storage. That is under the rear dinette seat. The side dinette area is more spread out (longer table and more leg room) than the FWC side dinette. No need to interlock legs with the person sitting across from you; you both have your own legroom in the CampX. There is storage under the sink/stove. The final storage area is a cabinet under the fridge. That under-fridge cabinet got a bit smaller for 2020 because they had to separate the battery box and vent it in case people ran lead acid rather than lithium. In 2019, the battery was open in the underseat cabinet that stored the 20 gallon water tank and water pump. The water tank and battery sat front to back. For 2020, the battery is within the same compartment, but is in an additional sealed and vented battery box. The Redarc unit is now mounted vertically in the larger underseat battery/water pump/water tank compartment (in 2019, it was in the under-fridge compartment mounted horizontally on a bracket handing from the top of that compartment).
One of our favorite things is how much room is available over the bed when the camper top is down. That is one thing that makes the cabover thicker, and overall height taller, than a FWC. We no longer will have to store all our covers and pillows in one of the dinette seat compartments and make and unmake our bed twice a day. Big selling point for us. Also very happy that one can sit in the dinette with the top down with minor to no ducking. We could not sit in the FWC with the top down.
We haven't yet started to determine where everything is going to go. More to come when I start a new thread for 2020 CampX.
Oh, and I fixed the Truma heater error code that was preventing it from firing. It turns out that the wire leads were not plugged into the Truma Room Temp Sensor. Unfortunately, the sensor is installed in a place where you can't readily get to it; the vertical drivers-side wall of the fridge housing. I'd previously unplugged and checked the pins of the X7 connector up by the controller and heater and all was good on that end, so today, I unbolted the fridge and pulled it forward six or eight inches to inspect the back of the temp sensor. The two leads had never been plugged into the sensor. I squeezed in there with a needle nose pliers and plugged in both leads and the Truma heater fired right up. Problem solved. I was going to move the swing-direction of the fridge door while I was in there, but one of the six bolts are covered by the fridge metal trim and I didn't feel like unbolting it as well. We'll see how the swing-direction is day to day and then decide if it's worth it. I re-installed the six bolts holding the fridge in place and all is good.
One surprise was the hex head bolts holding the fridge in place (and all the other hex bolts I checked inside and outside the camper) are not metric. They are SAE. That was a bit disappointing. Even though I'm in the states, I have a distaste for SAE and love metric. I have a few backup tools that are SAE, but all my good stuff and travel stuff that I keep in the truck is metric. I'll have to go over all the other fasteners and see if there are other SAE, rather than metric, and make some adjustments to my travel toolbox. I dislike having to take what feels like duplicate tools if traveling with a combination of metric and SAE.
Regarding solar, there is a single solar plug and it is on the lower exterior of the drivers side wall near the 30amp plug. Both feed directly into the Redarc. There is no need for a controller on a portable panel. If one wanted to mount a solar panel permanently on the roof, I've not explored that option yet. Overland Explored mounts solar panels on the Hudson Bay Edition (HBE) flatbed popup camper, so they must have it figured out. Or you could run a cord down the exterior, but I'm sure there is a better way. I loved designing, piecing together, installing and using the Solar system for our FWC. I had the truck wired to plug into the FWC, but always had it disconnected under the hood because the 180watt solar panel always kept us topped up. I left the wiring there as a backup. I'm undecided on what to do with our system. Redarc requires nice big gauge wire, so I may leave it hooked up and see if I even need solar. I'll leave the stock 100amp AGM for now (it is an impressive industrial deep cycle AGM that was included). I'd planned on doing a 100amp lithium, but have decided to not spend the money for now. We'll see how the useable 50 amps from the 100amp AGM server us.
I just love sitting in this camper. Partly, I'm sure, because it's new and different, but just really appreciate the insulated honeycomb panels/construction, insulated soft-top and insulated windows and the high end Truma heater and water heater and also the Redarc battery management system. All top notch.