Bundutec campers are wood frame construction, old school for sure but if done right is a legit way to build. Rory has been building campers for a long time, learning his trade from his father who founded Northstar I believe in the 60's. Looking at his camper at the Expo I was impressed with the fit and finish of it, cabinets were well made, good hardware used, nice windows/skylight, modern appliances and electric roof lift mechanism. I'am confident I will get a nice camper built from them.
Wood does have it's downside though, it is heavy, if not built right will fall apart going down washboard roads and can rot if leaks occur and are not addressed. Also has upsides as well, cheaper to construct, easy to repair compared to some other building methods and condensation is not as big of a issue with wood. Have had quite a few campers and trailers over the last 40 years all but one were wood construction. Two of them were Northstar popups and had good luck with both of them although the 2nd one I didn't have for to long, I sold it and replaced it with a outfitter apex which ended up being a total disaster, it was a Aluminum frame camper.
While deciding on which way to go on campers for the last few months I did quite a bit of research. Should I go with a FWC/ATC aluminum frame camper? the light weights of aluminum was enticing but there was alot of people complaining of excessive amounts of condensation inside of their campers due to the thermal transfer of aluminum. I also felt that the FWC are fairly pricey for what you get, the cabinets although are nicer now than they use to be are still a little flimsy IMO. The roof lifting system is simple and works but should a camper with this setup be this costly? Also with FWC there was no customization available which meant the camper would not really fit my truck all that well. ATC's had a lot of the same problems as FWC but was able to get some customization not available with FWC which would of made the camper fit the truck better....except for the fact that they would not increase the depth or thickness of the cabover portion of the camper. That caused a few problems, first being a huge gap between the truck cab and camper that would cause a huge wind buffeting issue unless the gap was filled with something. 2nd by not having a deeper cabover your giving up valuable storage area and there is never enough storage in a popup camper. And 3rd it would just be butt ugly IMHO.
Thought about composite campers for a awhile and like the advantages they have, but ultimately they were all out of my price range. Don't think I mentioned in my earlier post on this build and really should have at the begining but my budget for this build was between $65-70K. With the truck, flatbed and other goodies for the truck there just isn't enough left over for a composite camper.
That left wood construction for my choice and not a lot of brands to consider from either. I really like Alaskan's campers and like Northstar have been around forever but they didn't fit my budget either, they are not giving them away for sure. They are well built which makes them heavy but are pleasant to sit inside reminded me of our camper we had back in the 60's.