I'd be super excited for this to hit the market. I've been eyeing the Scout Olympic but waiting to see what their Kenai model looks like. If you came in at $10-12k I would be motivated to try my own build out and trade some time for money vs buying the Scout at $20k or building out a FWC shell at $13k.
- Size: Offer two lengths, one that fits within a fullsize short bed (make sure it fits Ram's 6'4" bed) and one that fits within 8' beds. Offer an optional wraparound storage box so the 8' length can go on a shortbed truck and make use of the extra space. Would need to include brake lights for the larger wraparound option.
- Cab over bed: 48" minimum, 54" would be better (same width as a full mattress). Pullout appeals to many but not hugely important to me.
- Width: 7' wide exterior should give enough room for people to sleep east-west in the cabover.
- Interior height: 78" is reasonable but I wouldn't go any higher. I'm short, and would prefer as much overhead clearance as possible. I'm more likely to mount skis/kayaks/boxes on top of a hardside than a popup which just makes overhead clearance more in demand.
- Vehicle: Full size to start with, then flatbed and compact truck options.
Some other thoughts:
-Options for two roof hatches for fans, one in cabover and one in kitchen area.
-Would be awesome if you provided reinforcements in standard locations to mount cabinets or e-track on the interior and hang boxes, tables, maxtrax on the outside (especially the back)
-Happijac/torquelift tiedowns, or turnbuckles and eyebolts in the bed? Scout has a nice in-bed solution that doesn't require holes in the camper wall.
-An area inside that can get wet and drain would be great for shower, skis, wet gear, grey water etc.
-Will you need a fire egress window?
-An option for mounting propane tanks with lines serving the interior and exterior would be handy.
-Lighting options, both DOT/brake lights, backup flood lights, around camp lights, and interior lights would all be handy, but not sure what you're thinking for wiring?
-If you could offer a couple standard bezels/hatch covers so that we can cut holes as needed for venting/plumbing/etc that'd be handy.
-Options for heating. The whole point of getting a composite hardwall camper for me would be winter trips so heating is important. I hate the standard RV forced air furnace so compatibility with Truma or the Dickinson Newport furnace that Scout is offering would be killer.