richingalveston
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Here is the start of my over lander. It is not a military vehicle but works well. I lived and worked in this for 8 months while working storms in Iowa and Louisiana. It is a big foot 9,6 (short bed camper) on my 2018 GMC 3500 long bed. There is a 90 gallon diesel tank between the camper and the cab of the truck. I carry extra water jugs and gas cans for the generator on top of the tank. I have a Honda 3000i on the front of the truck that powers the camper with out any problems. The only issue with the Honda is it likes premium gas.
I have ordered an aluminum flatbed for the truck from Bullhead products in Kodak Tenn. (wlll be ready in November) When the flat bed is installed I will move the generator to the side of the camper along with the fuel tank. I plan to purchase a 3500 Onan diesel generator in the future and add another 90 gallon fuel tank for it. There will still be an approx. 1 ft. space between head ache rack on the front of the camper that will hold an additional water tank.
The camper has a 40 gallon water tank, large propane/110V fridge, 4 burner stove, micro wave, toilet and shower and a booth dinette which converts to a double bed. The over the cab portion has a queen bed. Roof top ac with heat and a propane heater, propane water heater. This bigfoot camper is a 2001 model that I purchase for $8500 (stole it, should have sold for about 12k). The camper is like new on the inside. The truck I already had.
When finished my rig will have 126 gallons of diesel for the truck, 90 gallons of diesel for the generator. approx. 100 gallons of fresh water, lithium battery bank that will run the AC overnight so you don't have to worry about the generator at night . From my previous 8 months living in it with the current config I can go two weeks in the camper on 40 gallons of water and about 30 gallons of gas for the Honda (running gen almost 24/7). The new configuration will allow me to go 30 to 45 days. The truck gets 14 MPG with the camper which allows for an approx. 1800 mile range. The future set will allow more range by using the generator fuel when needed.
I am posting this to show that a regular dually truck makes a perfect over lander with one of these cab over campers. These campers can be found used for reasonable prices.
I have 10k invested as is. The truck bed will put me at 20k. (it is a nice bed). The new generator and tanks will run me another 7K. My total investment will be approx. 30k without the truck ( I paid 56k for the truck in 2018, stole the truck also). Compare this to an already built over lander or custom van and it is less than 25% of the cost. You can do it on a lot cheaper truck than what I have but even with the truck my cost is 1/2 or better of any company built over lander out there.
It can be done a lot cheaper if the truck is dedicated to the camper then the nice flat bed is not needed and the camper can be mounted to the truck frame with some custom work to hold the items you choose on each side. (fuel, tool boxes, generator etc.) some campers have the generator built in (mine did but was removed by previous owner) however most of these generators are propane and can't run very long on the amount of fuel you can carry. A diesel truck and generator is the only way to get the capacity to go more than 4 weeks at a time. Fully loaded my set up added to the truck is about 4500 lbs. (air bags are also being added to the truck)
The truck is my daily driver for now and I also us it on my farm hauling hay and pulling gooseneck trailers. When ready to overland all the items can be loaded on the bed in about 2 hours and you are ready to go.
Using a regular dually truck keeps your insurance cheep and attainable. Using a manufactured camper instead of a home built allows you to get in any RV park. Many RV parks will not allow a home built camper. I only go to the RV park for one night every two weeks to dump my tanks and refill with fresh water and flush everything.
I spent 5 months in lake charles LA. living in the golden nugget parking lot where it cost me approx. $8 to $12 per day (outside temp makes a big difference in fuel consumption) to live comfortably with AC.
you can also still pull a 10,000 lb trailer with this rig and not need a CDL.
Will post again when my flat bed is on the truck. Just wanted to give people out there who are interested in an over lander how it can be done without having anything larger than a one ton truck. The LMTV and other vehicles are out there but most likely will be a money pit. Put the money into the camper and bed set up and I believe you will be happier.
When not overlanding the truck can server other purposes, mine eventually be my farm truck and over lander instead of my daily driver.
I have ordered an aluminum flatbed for the truck from Bullhead products in Kodak Tenn. (wlll be ready in November) When the flat bed is installed I will move the generator to the side of the camper along with the fuel tank. I plan to purchase a 3500 Onan diesel generator in the future and add another 90 gallon fuel tank for it. There will still be an approx. 1 ft. space between head ache rack on the front of the camper that will hold an additional water tank.
The camper has a 40 gallon water tank, large propane/110V fridge, 4 burner stove, micro wave, toilet and shower and a booth dinette which converts to a double bed. The over the cab portion has a queen bed. Roof top ac with heat and a propane heater, propane water heater. This bigfoot camper is a 2001 model that I purchase for $8500 (stole it, should have sold for about 12k). The camper is like new on the inside. The truck I already had.
When finished my rig will have 126 gallons of diesel for the truck, 90 gallons of diesel for the generator. approx. 100 gallons of fresh water, lithium battery bank that will run the AC overnight so you don't have to worry about the generator at night . From my previous 8 months living in it with the current config I can go two weeks in the camper on 40 gallons of water and about 30 gallons of gas for the Honda (running gen almost 24/7). The new configuration will allow me to go 30 to 45 days. The truck gets 14 MPG with the camper which allows for an approx. 1800 mile range. The future set will allow more range by using the generator fuel when needed.
I am posting this to show that a regular dually truck makes a perfect over lander with one of these cab over campers. These campers can be found used for reasonable prices.
I have 10k invested as is. The truck bed will put me at 20k. (it is a nice bed). The new generator and tanks will run me another 7K. My total investment will be approx. 30k without the truck ( I paid 56k for the truck in 2018, stole the truck also). Compare this to an already built over lander or custom van and it is less than 25% of the cost. You can do it on a lot cheaper truck than what I have but even with the truck my cost is 1/2 or better of any company built over lander out there.
It can be done a lot cheaper if the truck is dedicated to the camper then the nice flat bed is not needed and the camper can be mounted to the truck frame with some custom work to hold the items you choose on each side. (fuel, tool boxes, generator etc.) some campers have the generator built in (mine did but was removed by previous owner) however most of these generators are propane and can't run very long on the amount of fuel you can carry. A diesel truck and generator is the only way to get the capacity to go more than 4 weeks at a time. Fully loaded my set up added to the truck is about 4500 lbs. (air bags are also being added to the truck)
The truck is my daily driver for now and I also us it on my farm hauling hay and pulling gooseneck trailers. When ready to overland all the items can be loaded on the bed in about 2 hours and you are ready to go.
Using a regular dually truck keeps your insurance cheep and attainable. Using a manufactured camper instead of a home built allows you to get in any RV park. Many RV parks will not allow a home built camper. I only go to the RV park for one night every two weeks to dump my tanks and refill with fresh water and flush everything.
I spent 5 months in lake charles LA. living in the golden nugget parking lot where it cost me approx. $8 to $12 per day (outside temp makes a big difference in fuel consumption) to live comfortably with AC.
you can also still pull a 10,000 lb trailer with this rig and not need a CDL.
Will post again when my flat bed is on the truck. Just wanted to give people out there who are interested in an over lander how it can be done without having anything larger than a one ton truck. The LMTV and other vehicles are out there but most likely will be a money pit. Put the money into the camper and bed set up and I believe you will be happier.
When not overlanding the truck can server other purposes, mine eventually be my farm truck and over lander instead of my daily driver.