I bought a 2004. 5 SRW shortbed 4X4 in July. My wife and I have been tent camping for years, and thought this would be a great opportunity to step up to a truck camper. I was also concerned about the “consumer truck camper loading rating' of only about 1400lbs. After reading many posts in this forum and the Trailer Life Open Roads Forum (mostly from folks that haul overweight and the folks who bash them for their lack of social consciousness), we decided to shop for a camper. Most folks agree that as long as you don't exceed your GVWR or individual axle ratings, you're OK.
We first hit the huge RV conglomerate here in western NY, and walked away depressed by the cost (pushing $30,000 for the higher end models!) and weight of the Lance campers. The next weekend we headed to Erie, Pa and found a local RV outfit that carries Travel Lite campers. Yep, no raised panel oak doors, crappy blinds to cover the windows, and formica countertops. We bought a 1 year old (looked new) Mountain Star model, and we were on our way! We also spent 1/2 of what a comparable Lance would have cost.
The dealer mounted the removable tiedown brackets to the spring mounts and trailer hitch, tightened the springloaded turnbuckles, gave us instructions on how to operate all the camper utilities. Off we lumbered down the road.
I was pretty intimidated at first, as even with the overloads the 3500 bottomed frequently. After our first trip, I ordered airbags to help level the truck and stop the bottoming. They were easy to install, no drilling, and took a total of 2 hours start to finish. Easy to level the truck and no more hitting bottom over bumps.
Havng truck scales at work, I weighed the truck with and without the camper. Keep in mind the tag on the camper rates it at 1800# empty.
Truck without camper:
Front axle 4400#
Rear axle 2800#
total 7200#
Truck with camper:
Front axle 4300#
Rear axle 5540#
total 9840#
The truck GVWR is 9900#, I'm probably a couple hundred pounds overweight loaded. No flames - I'm a risk taker.
The camper weighs 2640#, and the CG is slightly behind the rear axle, note the loss of 100# on the front axle with the camper in the truck.
So far, we've travled to the Outer Banks in North Carolina, through the Smoky Mountains, all over the Adirondaks, New York's Finger Lakes wine country, and most of central and southern Pennsylvania. Of the 9500 miles we've put on the truck since July, more than half has been with the camper in the bed. As far as power and braking, you don't even know the camper is there. The only issue is the side to side rocking as you corner, and the front to rear rocking on concrete expressways - I-80 in Pa. is the worst!
The Travel Lite camper has been great, no problems at all. It does everything it's supposed to do, and we have had no quality issues. I've learned that electric jacks would probably be worth the extra $1000, cranking the jacks one at a time with a drill is a pain in the butt when loading and unloading the camper. Even so, we're down to 45 minutes start to finish to remove the tonneau cover, remove the tailgate, move the license plate to the camper, jack up the camper, mount the tie downs to the truck, load the camper (getting it aligned is the hard part!!), lower it into the bed, attach and tighten the turnbuckles, plug in the power plug to the truck, inflate the rear tires to 80 psi, and inflate the air bags to 50 psi.
Now that we have some experience, we'd do the same thing again, but the camper would have electric jacks!
Enjoy it, you've got a lot of great experiences ahead!
Scott