Oh. Well they don't currently have an F550 with their shell on it but there is a Ram 5500 that will be at Overland Expo in flagstaff this weekend. I am sure there will be pics available after that.I was wondering what the new F550 camper looked like.
There are a handful of molds and the parts are bonded together after being removed from the mold with or without extension pieces.It looks the same length as the 8' Baja, but definitely wider. These look like each piece is made with a separate mold, but maybe they have a method to tweak width and length without a whole new mold?
It seems a little funny to brag about a 15k weight. My rig is nearly as big and half the weight. It's all the stuff...
If I recall, the weight on one of those tire and wheel combos was a bit over 250lbs.It looks like a couple thousand pounds of wheels and tires on that grey model.
I'm curious how they accomplish that without a seam. I guess if there is a structural interface that fits in the edges, that could be bonded?There are a handful of molds and the parts are bonded together after being removed from the mold with or without extension pieces.
This is so they can build for both short and long bed models with the same molds more or less.
Yes, I'm seeing it now. Looks like they are both 60" CA, but the 5500 has ~60" behind as well, at the bottom level.With the Ram they added 12 inches to the length of the long bed model and 9 inches to the width.
The guy selling the one I took the photo from above, said about ~11k lbs... but no idea if he actually weighed it.Most of the regular Bajas built on the 350 or 3500 platforms are starting with a truck that usually pushes nearly 7000lbs straight from the factory.
They told me that one of the recent Chevy Baja units with the diesel weighed 11,300. Guess the gas would be 800 pounds less.I'm curious how they accomplish that without a seam. I guess if there is a structural interface that fits in the edges, that could be bonded?
Yes, I'm seeing it now. Looks like they are both 60" CA, but the 5500 has ~60" behind as well, at the bottom level.
The guy selling the one I took the photo from above, said about ~11k lbs... but no idea if he actually weighed it.
For what it's worth, Rossmonster has been doing vans for a long time. They are just down the street from us. I even built a climbing gym back in 2018, and they did all the wood working in our gym. Ross, the founder, is a brilliant wood worker. It's great to see their business pivoting to the overland space.The anomaly of the past few years is settling down. There will be a handful of companies left that are actually competing... no more inflated prices and 2 year backlogs. This could be a particularly bad time to make a big investment in a new product, as many barely used rigs are being put on the market.
If Truckhouse had started with the AEV Ram platform I think they would have been better established, and more likely to make a go of it. For a new company, Rossmonster seems to have a good product and good reviews with the Baja. A lot depends on how they've managed the business end.