TL/DR: Would you go to Alaska in a Sequoia towing a camper, or get a truck?
New member but longtime forum lurker looking for some advice on an upcoming adventure. Every 4 years, I get a 6 week paid sabbatical from work to do anything I like. My first one is planned for summer 2021, and we've decided on a 6 week road trip from home base in Denver to Alaska. We'll be hitting up Denali NP, the Kenai Penninsula, and various stops along the way. It'll be my wife, our daughter (2.5 years old by the time we leave), and me in a 19' Rockwood Geopro camper (~3,800 lbs fully loaded). The plan is to use the camper as a base camp for various short adventures and trips, so doing some decent off roading and overlanding without the trailer is an option. About 2 years ago, we bought a 2017 Sequoia, trading in a beloved 2012 Xterra Pro4X so that we could tow a family size camper and still have decent off road capability. Now that the trip is coming up, however, I'm starting to doubt the Sequoia as being up for it. It's an amazing tow vehicle for the camper, reliable and super comfortable. But for a few reasons, I'm not sure how well it will work.
First of all, it's got about 90k miles and will need several grand worth of work before the trip (new tires, new brakes, new shocks, and new fluids at a minimum). Additionally, we'll be off-grid for much of the trip. So, we'll either need to carry a generator in the Sequoia or upgrade the solar and batteries on the camper (another $2k). We will also have to carry a substantial amount of gas on the roof rack (effective range is only about 120-150 miles towing the camper). Finally, I just know that every time we have to pass up an opporunity to explore up a rough road because we're in a stock Sequoia, I'll be bummed. We wouldn't attempt anything hardcore in the middle of nowhere Alaska with a Toddler, but it'd be nice to have some basic capability and underbody protection. So that leads us to thinking we should consider an upgrade. Further complicating things, the dealer that sold us the Sequoia 45k miles ago is willing to give us nearly what we paid for it on trade if we do something this month, making it really tempting to trade it in. So, here are the options--I'd love some opinions from those that have been there a done that!
1. Keep it Cheap and just go with the flow. Basic upgrades and maintenance on the Sequoia so it can safely complete the trip. Carry extra gas and a small generator on our roof rack and call it a day. Or pay the $2k to upgrade the solar setup an leave the generator at home. It's the cheapest way to go, but it'll limit our options for adventure on the trip.
2. Invest in the Sequoia. The aftermarket is pretty limited, but there seem to be some decent options for spacer lifts, bigger tires and TRD skid plates. Should we try and turn the Sequoia into an overlander? Or would it be throwing good money after bad, and end up getting minimal gains for big money?
3. Upgrade to a truck. The dealer has a pretty slick 2018 Tundra TRD Off Road with only 25k miles for $42k. Not cheap, but we can afford it if it's worth it. We'd save several grand in work on the Sequoia by trading it. We'd get a ton of convenience from being able to throw the generator, firewood, gas, etc in the bed. And it's moderately more capable off road, with basic skid plates, solid rear axle, and great aftermarket support. This would probably be the most comfortable option, but is the big extra investment (~$16k after the trade) going to give a meaningful enough improvement to be worth the money? Are there less expensive full size trucks worth considering? Titan? Leftover 2020 F150?
4. Double down on an off-roader. Options are limited for something that can tow our camper and still be meaningfully better off road than the Sequoia or a Tundra. But the Lexus GX might work, and the wife LOVES it. It's smaller than a fullsize truck or the Sequoia, is capable enough towing, and has a lot of aftermarket options. But we'd be spending around $35k and not getting the additional usefulness of a truck bed. Is that really worth it?
I know "do whatever you want" is probably the right answer, but I'd love to hear from people experienced in these sorts of adventures about the relative tradeoffs when traveling through Alaska with a trailer. Thanks everyone!
New member but longtime forum lurker looking for some advice on an upcoming adventure. Every 4 years, I get a 6 week paid sabbatical from work to do anything I like. My first one is planned for summer 2021, and we've decided on a 6 week road trip from home base in Denver to Alaska. We'll be hitting up Denali NP, the Kenai Penninsula, and various stops along the way. It'll be my wife, our daughter (2.5 years old by the time we leave), and me in a 19' Rockwood Geopro camper (~3,800 lbs fully loaded). The plan is to use the camper as a base camp for various short adventures and trips, so doing some decent off roading and overlanding without the trailer is an option. About 2 years ago, we bought a 2017 Sequoia, trading in a beloved 2012 Xterra Pro4X so that we could tow a family size camper and still have decent off road capability. Now that the trip is coming up, however, I'm starting to doubt the Sequoia as being up for it. It's an amazing tow vehicle for the camper, reliable and super comfortable. But for a few reasons, I'm not sure how well it will work.
First of all, it's got about 90k miles and will need several grand worth of work before the trip (new tires, new brakes, new shocks, and new fluids at a minimum). Additionally, we'll be off-grid for much of the trip. So, we'll either need to carry a generator in the Sequoia or upgrade the solar and batteries on the camper (another $2k). We will also have to carry a substantial amount of gas on the roof rack (effective range is only about 120-150 miles towing the camper). Finally, I just know that every time we have to pass up an opporunity to explore up a rough road because we're in a stock Sequoia, I'll be bummed. We wouldn't attempt anything hardcore in the middle of nowhere Alaska with a Toddler, but it'd be nice to have some basic capability and underbody protection. So that leads us to thinking we should consider an upgrade. Further complicating things, the dealer that sold us the Sequoia 45k miles ago is willing to give us nearly what we paid for it on trade if we do something this month, making it really tempting to trade it in. So, here are the options--I'd love some opinions from those that have been there a done that!
1. Keep it Cheap and just go with the flow. Basic upgrades and maintenance on the Sequoia so it can safely complete the trip. Carry extra gas and a small generator on our roof rack and call it a day. Or pay the $2k to upgrade the solar setup an leave the generator at home. It's the cheapest way to go, but it'll limit our options for adventure on the trip.
2. Invest in the Sequoia. The aftermarket is pretty limited, but there seem to be some decent options for spacer lifts, bigger tires and TRD skid plates. Should we try and turn the Sequoia into an overlander? Or would it be throwing good money after bad, and end up getting minimal gains for big money?
3. Upgrade to a truck. The dealer has a pretty slick 2018 Tundra TRD Off Road with only 25k miles for $42k. Not cheap, but we can afford it if it's worth it. We'd save several grand in work on the Sequoia by trading it. We'd get a ton of convenience from being able to throw the generator, firewood, gas, etc in the bed. And it's moderately more capable off road, with basic skid plates, solid rear axle, and great aftermarket support. This would probably be the most comfortable option, but is the big extra investment (~$16k after the trade) going to give a meaningful enough improvement to be worth the money? Are there less expensive full size trucks worth considering? Titan? Leftover 2020 F150?
4. Double down on an off-roader. Options are limited for something that can tow our camper and still be meaningfully better off road than the Sequoia or a Tundra. But the Lexus GX might work, and the wife LOVES it. It's smaller than a fullsize truck or the Sequoia, is capable enough towing, and has a lot of aftermarket options. But we'd be spending around $35k and not getting the additional usefulness of a truck bed. Is that really worth it?
I know "do whatever you want" is probably the right answer, but I'd love to hear from people experienced in these sorts of adventures about the relative tradeoffs when traveling through Alaska with a trailer. Thanks everyone!
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