rruff;
About $30k if I were to buy now. About $50k in 3 years. I was originally thinking if I found something I really liked right now and it was more than $30k I might buy it now to have it for later. Two things have put that on hold.
First, serious health issues in the family compel me to be a learner about truck campers instead of buyer and user at this time. Second, I don't know enough about anything to make a wise decision. I liked this rig and made inquiries of the owner. He responded quickly, thoroughly, and in detail. But the family issue arose during my email conversations and put the kabosh on going further.
Vehicle: 1997 Ford F-250HD 4x4 5spd manual extra cab long bed 7.3 power stroke diesel with 4.10 gears (135k miles) Suspension upgrades: Solid axle swap from 2009 Super duty Swap to coil sprung front suspension 4 inch lift from Sky offroad design 2008-2016 suspension swap Air lift load lifter...
expeditionportal.com
At my age, and I'll be older when I start my epic, comforts are important; especially for full time living (as long as that'll be). Shower, hot water, heat, etc. I believe some popups have indoor showers. Waist high stalls with shower curtain as the upper walls. That's a plus.
The cons, to me, are as you said. Popups don't have much on board storage; unless they're a flatbed rig or the owner designed/improvised additional storage. Or an ambulance, but I don't know how those would do on rougher roads/trails.
The tent-like walls of a popup don't appeal to me. For the cost of a good reputation popup, I don't want to hear the canvas flapping, don't want to lose heat through the walls. Also, much as I try, I just find the interior "vibe" or "feel" to be cold and not homey or inviting. At my age those things are more important than when I was 20-50 and backpack camped.
But you've prodded me to look into popups more. And to focus on hard sides that are narrower and shorter, for better 'wilderness' driveability.
I like some of the Northern Lites. That wet bath is appealing. But they seem pretty big for the kinds of places I want to go. Haven't really studied the specs on all their models, though.
Any idea if the "winterized" Lance models do what they're advertised to do? Keep water tank/pipes from freezing with ducted heat? I don't like the big hangover in back, though, that Lance has.