The Sunrader was cheap; ~$50-60k in today's money. It's a very different market vs a $300-400k rig.I thought about mentioning the allure of the Sunrader. I don't personally want anything this small but many do.
The scale and shading is all off. Look close around the edges of both guys, thats not natural or normal.
I am definitely a solid axle fan. The only thing we own with it is my wife's Honda Element.Earthroamer used to make a jeep version of their camper. I think the new Jeep pickup would make a lot more sense than the Tacoma as a platform. It has a solid front axle and more powerful drivetrain, even a diesel i believe.
.... many people are ... ignorant about designing and building things, they believe that if you have pretty renderings and a list of specs, and $$$... you just push a button....
I hope they do make it, there's plenty of demand out there. I think the biggest challenge they have is bringing it in under 1285 pounds (the Taco payload capacity) - I just have a hard time seeing how to get there.
Agree on this one. The building materials today are no more than glue and sawdust. Hence the reasons why in our area if someone has a house fire, they have only seconds to get out before the entire house is consumed by glue fueled fire. I beam truss are terrible. they collapse in seconds if hit by fire. My house, which we built new in 1994 (was my parents house at the time) is all solid wood, with match lumber on the exterior instead of plywood or OSB. I do not hear anything outside and it's great. My last house was a new construction in 2009. It was cheap OSB exterior, I Beam floor system etc. It was like a drum. every sound just echoed through the home from outside. Wind would blow through the walls. It was a POS. Spend the extra money and get the good stuff!ever see what passes for "quality" in the residential construction business? most of what i see being built are '5 year houses' - basically the life of flexible adhesive caulking. people with too much money build a picture, and then move on, leaving owner #2 with the maintenance problems.
They have redesigned the frame and what not to take more than the taco payload.
What I am saying is that there is no way (that I am aware of) to increase the legal maximum weight of the vehicle (the GVWR) once it has left the factory.
Yeah I get what you are saying - in the US there is very limited enforcement of non-commercial vehicle weights. I would be wary of liability issues, particularly as an upfitter.When and where is it illegal to be over GVWR, though?