@jaywo
Feels like you are creeping towards a decision. You'll gather a lot of data on your rental trip. Compromises are inevitable, and perhaps the answer is having two camping rigs. A van for the longer trips (and knowing your offroad adventures will be a bit more limited and/or slow going). And then having the Bronco with existing rooftop setup for those trips where you want to get further out on rougher trails. Not a bad solution. We considered that ourselves. Camper van or hardwall pickup camper and then a jeep or small pickup with rooftop tent or topper camper. If only the vans had more towing capacity. Then one could pull a flatbed with a stripped down, light weight Jeep or Bronco for trail work and satelliting away from base camp.
Agreed on the the offroad capabilities being rather large between the Sprinter and Transit. Have was watching to see if Ford would offer something a bit more offroad worthy (lift, room for bigger tires, etc.) but Transit is a global platform and the offroad/van community is miniscule in overall sales numbers, so they are unlikely to mod the platform for such a niche market.
Many were concerned when the new Sprinter moved away from a high/low range transfer case and a "part time 4x4", but it was really more of an AWD system in function hence why many called it an "engageable AWD" and it couldn't split power 50/50 front to rear. New sprinter is fulltime AWD and transmission has more gears and a granny gear for first that gets ratio to the ground nearly as low as the previous gen in low range. Tranfer case design gave way more ground clearance, too. With there was a gas version of the sprinter available with the AWD system in the U.S. That would be a popular rig to get away from the emission issues with the Sprint diesels.
But all that is discussion for the camper van threads. Keep us posted after your rental trip!
Feels like you are creeping towards a decision. You'll gather a lot of data on your rental trip. Compromises are inevitable, and perhaps the answer is having two camping rigs. A van for the longer trips (and knowing your offroad adventures will be a bit more limited and/or slow going). And then having the Bronco with existing rooftop setup for those trips where you want to get further out on rougher trails. Not a bad solution. We considered that ourselves. Camper van or hardwall pickup camper and then a jeep or small pickup with rooftop tent or topper camper. If only the vans had more towing capacity. Then one could pull a flatbed with a stripped down, light weight Jeep or Bronco for trail work and satelliting away from base camp.
Agreed on the the offroad capabilities being rather large between the Sprinter and Transit. Have was watching to see if Ford would offer something a bit more offroad worthy (lift, room for bigger tires, etc.) but Transit is a global platform and the offroad/van community is miniscule in overall sales numbers, so they are unlikely to mod the platform for such a niche market.
Many were concerned when the new Sprinter moved away from a high/low range transfer case and a "part time 4x4", but it was really more of an AWD system in function hence why many called it an "engageable AWD" and it couldn't split power 50/50 front to rear. New sprinter is fulltime AWD and transmission has more gears and a granny gear for first that gets ratio to the ground nearly as low as the previous gen in low range. Tranfer case design gave way more ground clearance, too. With there was a gas version of the sprinter available with the AWD system in the U.S. That would be a popular rig to get away from the emission issues with the Sprint diesels.
But all that is discussion for the camper van threads. Keep us posted after your rental trip!