Welcome!
To answer your questions:
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how feasible is it to travel and camp in a CT?
For our family of 6, in a 7X16, very feasible, a little snug, but feasible, and traveling is so relatively easy, that I now will even take the CT for day trips.
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Will I regret going from a 30' TT to 16'-18'
I rented and camped in a 30' bumper pull camper, as well as a popup, and although both were well-suited to their application, neither were as useful and "comfortable" (within reason) as our CT. So I'll answer in reverse, now that I've built and camped in our CT, no way would I even consider the 30' bumper pull anymore.
-Software:
No help there, but what we did do, was make a list of everything we took with us camping, and over multiple trips, made note of what we spent our time doing, (hiking, paddling, cycling, sitting around a fire, sightseeing etc.) Discovered we spent very little time in the tents/campers, except for sleeping/change of clothes or inclement weather. I also took pictures our our campsite setup, (2 tents, outdoor kitchen, EZ-up style awning, bikes, chairs, gear, whatever). Then I began to get a better view of how the trailer would replace and support what we liked to do. It ended up becoming a small bunkhouse, and light toy/gear hauler, since so much of our activities were outdoor activities...(surprise, surprise...) I realized that most of the 30' camper was designed to be a shrunken piece of home, which made awful use of space. Some want that, we didn't. Any extra gear had to be stuffed in the van, loaded on racks on the top, or left at home. The CT gives you great freedom to design to fit you needs.
We toured a few big dealers just to see what was available in traditional "stick-built" campers, and I do mean "stick", as you have now discovered, I imagine. I was amazed at what folks were willing to charge for stuff that looked so good but was built so cheaply (structure and quality). Nothing out there fit our needs and was still bumper pull. Then enter tnttt.com-(wow).
You mentioned a fair amount of travel, and most of your stops are at improved campgrounds. The setup on our CT is faster than our old tent trips, so easy that I find myself slowing down the setup sometimes because I can't believe how easy it is. Same for packing up and heading out. My neighbors, even with the fancy factory built campers always seem to take more time and effort setting up and taking down. Most camps have decent bath houses, so we haven't added a shower or toilet to ours yet.
Most unusual concept is the number of "tours" we are asked to give of our camper, and the smiles and nods once folks check it out and the "light switches on" in their head. "It's really all you need isn't it?" "I wish I'd done something like that" "No payments, that sure makes the trip nicer", "How did you do that again?" "We hardly ever use our inside kitchen in our camper" and more are comments we often get. I realize I'm not out to impress the "Joneses" with my CT, but why do we go camping in the first place? To spend time making memories with our families, teaching our children, getting away from work, technology, and our busy, distracted lives, enjoying God's great outdoors.
Here's what we did, it's really bare bones, but it is modular, that's one of the best things about it for us.
http://www.tnttt.com/viewtopic.php?f=42&t=48345Air conditioning always enters the discussion, this was our answer:
http://www.tnttt.com/viewtopic.php?f=42&t=49438#p956281As far as travel, this thread should demonstrate what you can do with your CT, that would probably ruin a typical factory built camper. Our CTs have welded steel tubing in the walls and ceiling giving us a structural ruggedness you don't find anywhere else. I don't think twice about heading down a forest service road to a remote site.
http://www.tnttt.com/viewtopic.php?f=42&t=56125On another note, I can't tell you how handy it is to be able to park our entire rig in two-inline parking spaces. Full sized van plus our 7 x 16 will just make it. The ease of getting in and out of places is so worth it to us.
With your skill-sets and a little planning, you'll finish it in a few months, be camping, and relaxing by the campfire, shaking your head, wondering why you wasted all that time buying and repairing 5 campers, never having one that was "just right" (ha ha).
Welcome to the madness again, get that 30' sold, and get to work!
David (hey it's the "David" thread)