And for our next trick

24 February, 2010

Save to delicious Saved by 0 users


We have had a couple of trips. The trailer is fantastic to tow, a very good ride behind the car - at times it was easy to forget that she was there. We are planning to have several trips around the North West area of Tassie, with a bigger trip planned up the centre to Darwin in a couple of years (a Lotto win would help here).

Next major purchase will be a Solar panel - not sure the size, although the 150-160w may be the best option I think. Can have that hooked up to the deep draw battery so short term unpowered areas won't be an issue.

We purchased a great 80lt fridge/freezer from e-bay that runs on 12/240 volt.  Total cost for that was less than $700 including freight. In effect a saving of close to $900 on a named brand - yes only time will tell, however with the couple of uses already we are happy.

Some Photos

20 February, 2010

Save to delicious Saved by 0 users


 
 

Where to next

Save to delicious Saved by 0 users


Pod Trailers, or Stockmans is the direction that we went. Not able to do a hands on look here in Devonport, so we spent a lot of time talking to Phil and his team at Carrum Downs. After a lot of time researching what we specifically wanted, and having Phil answer a lot of questions we decided to go with something a little different. We had one made up on their all-roada trailer chassis as opposed to their off road model. This worked out to be a bit cheaper and lighter for us, and importantly the height of that model ment that we had a level draw when towing. The off road setup would have meant that the trailer slanted into the car.


The extras that we decided on (all Gen really wanted was a decent kitchen) are:
  • 68 lt water tank. This has connections and hand pump at the sink as well as a metal guard
  • A really large plastic storage tub on the draw bar
  • LED lights
  • Longer draw bar
  • Kitchen
  • Sunrasia rims and new tyres.
  • Spare mounted under body. This is at the rear of the axle, with the water tank in front - excellent weight distribution.
Phil discussed some extras such as racks on the trailer and 12/240v electrics, however the racks we wil get later and I did something different for power.

The tent is the standard product range from Stockmans, and although we had not seen it erected the photos on the web site plus extra ones that Phil sent really helped.

After some negotiation on price and pick up details we were away. Ordered in early Sep 09 with a pick up on 24 Dec 09 (Phil came in after their breakup party). Stockmans kept us in the loop every few weeks with how the order was progressing. We are both really impressed with the service and good cheer that Stockmans provided at all stages of the transaction. 


So What did we buy?

18 February, 2010

Save to delicious Saved by 0 users



This was the longest portion – so many quality trailers.  We did flirt a little with buying one from e-bay and then kitting it out to what we wanted. Although these went for around the $5,000 mark, still a metal setup. This still did not really meet our needs though, and with one exception, all the trailers that I viewed (online – really love the internet at times) where big, cumbersome and very, very, very heavy.

Our camping was not going to be full off road, so we didn’t need something that required a tank to tow it. Something that would not overly trouble an X Trail and my back (in that order), that would not be too expensive with additional fuel costs.

While searching 4WD Action I stumbled, literally as I miss-selected a site, across Stockman trailers. This caught our attention straightaway as they are a camper trailer based on a metal chassis with a plastic tub. Hmmm, yes I do that, liked the premise and they do look kinda cool – not like the big and boxy metal trailers.  We were able to put several ticks in box’s- - light weight, reduced environmental impact etc.

Creative Commons License
This work by Peter Mullen is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 2.5 Australia License.