So there was a good amount to deal with over the last months and the camper project has now moved along with the family to Colorado. I knocked out the underside of the roof lamination before we left as I was concerned it would get damaged otherwise. The roof was laid over top of the camper after it was loaded into the moving truck and an easy 1000lb was stacked on top of it and also had me crawling over it to load/unload stuff stacked on it. This is just in its single panel state, the side walls aren’t attached yet to it, it survived the move just fine and has eased any structural concerns I might have had about it.
Working on getting life/garage settled here but hoping to get some solid work done on wrapping up the shell over the winter now that I finally got the bear of that last BIG roof lamination done that I was procrastinating over.
Pictures off the wife's camera of how this unique move went down...
This is the offloading, it went in reverse of this process. I built a cradle around the camper to attach jacks to in multiple locations depending on which way we decided to load it, in the truck I rested it on some flat 2x4s so I could get a pry bar under neath the slip moving dolleys back under to roll it to the back of the truck. Poke the back out and get the first set of jacks on.
Then run the jacks down to lift the camper off the rear set of dolleys, lift up the jacks to then slip the dolleys under the jacks and then lift the camper back up. Then carefully push the camper back to expose the front set of offset jack mounts.
Repeat the dolley shuffling process to get them under the front jacks and then push the contraption backwards to clear the truck and lower it down.
Once lowered down we pushed it into the garage and I used jack stands/floor jack to work it all the way back down to just resting on the moving dolleys.