Eightysix45
New member
I finally got to see a Scout Olympic at my local dealer today. I’m afraid to say that my impression is exactly what I hoped it wasn’t going to be. The general concept and layout are good, the shell is good, the jacks are great, the interior and workmanship are RV quality. If you are on expedition portal then I trust you know what “RV” quality is.
Lots of sloppy silicone, stapled interior, wood screws into composite panel, missing screws on under cabinet wire loom, cushions poorly velcroed to seat base & back. The solar panel seems to be the flexible type which don’t perform as well, loads of silicone around the panel and a giant loop of wire on the angled portion of roof where the wires go through the roof, first encounter with tree branches and those wires are gone.
I am currently in a Four Wheel Camper that has been around the back roads of the West and Baja Mexico for the last 17 years, it’s had a hard life but I’ll be damned if it isn’t still holding together without any significant issue. I see no way the Scout interior and related accessories will last a year on washboard roads without coming apart. While Scout doesn’t directly bill their campers as off road capable, it’s certainly implied through their relentless social media postings.
if you camp in established campgrounds and stick to occasional gravel roads then this camper will probably work for you. If you take the road less traveled then I’d skip the Scout.
Lots of sloppy silicone, stapled interior, wood screws into composite panel, missing screws on under cabinet wire loom, cushions poorly velcroed to seat base & back. The solar panel seems to be the flexible type which don’t perform as well, loads of silicone around the panel and a giant loop of wire on the angled portion of roof where the wires go through the roof, first encounter with tree branches and those wires are gone.
I am currently in a Four Wheel Camper that has been around the back roads of the West and Baja Mexico for the last 17 years, it’s had a hard life but I’ll be damned if it isn’t still holding together without any significant issue. I see no way the Scout interior and related accessories will last a year on washboard roads without coming apart. While Scout doesn’t directly bill their campers as off road capable, it’s certainly implied through their relentless social media postings.
if you camp in established campgrounds and stick to occasional gravel roads then this camper will probably work for you. If you take the road less traveled then I’d skip the Scout.