They must be good because a Nationwide search shows maybe 20 used for sale. That is a sign of satisfaction and build quality.
Sent from my Pixel 3 using Tapatalk
Moderator: eaglesdare
stcyrwm wrote:Okay, I did it. I read all 477 pages. Kind of funny to see the periodic posts all the way back to a hundred pages about what an accomplishment it is to read this - little did they know. Makes me wonder about people reading this when it is 800 pges long, haha.
Anyway, I appreciate everyone's sharing. I am looking at starting a build within the next few months (if I don't cop out and buy something like a used trailmanor instead) but I am still in research mode at the moment. Whatever I do it will be more like a tiny home than a tiny teardrop - thinking in the 16 to 24 foot range. It would be something my partner and I would be living in off and on for a couple years.
Thanks again for making it a little easier for others to be crazy in their own way!
Bill
Hamilton Felix wrote: We want this camper to be extremely basic. But when I mentioned the possibility of occasionally pulling it behind our modified WJ Jeep, up old logging roads, she suggested swapping wheels & tires.
Hamilton Felix wrote:Thanks I like the "squaredrop," and the tow vehicle. Is that an original Cherokee, or was there a two door Wagoneer? We have a pair of Jeep WJ's, one modified, one not. My Scout 80 days are far behind me.
There is so much to learn and absorb. I haven't even done anything yet, and I'm already getting excited about what you can do with foam. I have a son working for BNSF; it would be a chuckle to make him a foamie that looked like a caboose or maybe a new Dash 9 locomotive. It looks like foam can make any shape. I'm even thinking one could build in one's icebox, if building with 2" foam anyway. Where we live, close to 80 inches a year of chilly rain is the norm, so we want the insulation.
I will check out that YouTube channel.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 18 guests