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Old 02-04-2007, 10:37 AM   #2
Motor31
Senior Member
 
Join Date: May 2005
Posts: 2,130
I think you will find that a large rig (34' or larger) will limit you in many parks. Many of them were designed for smaller camping size (15' to 30') size rigs. Height will also be a consideration in parks in a forest. Getting up to 12' tall might have your rig bashing through tree branches.

Park camping and fulltiming can go together but you'll be in the rig for a long time. If you feel cramped or limited on what you can take with you it will diminish the experience as well. If you plan on boondocking (dry camping) you'll also have to consider water, grey and black tank capacity particularly if the park has no hookups convenient to the camp ground space and you want to spend more than a couple days there.

Most fulltimers go for larger rigs since that will be their home rather than a camper. You need to examine what you want and the limitations that might be applied to your home depending on what you choose. Keep in mind the empty rig "looks" pretty large when you walk through it. Try to imagine what it would be like after you load your "stuff" in it. The average full timing couple adds about 3,000 lbs of "stuff" to their rig so don't short yourself on cargo capacity. You'll be surprised how fast the weight adds up. Don't figure the empty weight on the sticker is accurate either. Few if any manufacturers weigh each rig as it leaves the factory. Take the unit to a truck stop scale and weigh it to get the real weight. Then subtract the real empty weight from the max (GVW) of the unit to know what it can carry.

Fulltimeng involves really living in the unit. If you won't be comfortable, you won't be happy. Try to pick the unit that will give you the most benefit for the majority of the time you will be using it.
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Mike Nancy and the fuzzies
Fulltiming since June 2004
Volvo 660 MH tow vehicle
2005 MS 38RL
2007 Saturn Ion "toad"
2010 Gold Wing "piggyback"
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