Hi Burnsy,
I still reckon the Camprite is arguably the best camper trailer on the market for families. But having said that, its not without its compromises. Now the biggest isssue for us after 4 years has been packing it for a trip. Some of these issues are due to how we stored it, but others are relevant to all. We kept the Camprite outside, under a tarp, down the side of the house. To access it, I had to move it to the driveway and remove the tarp. While this only takes ~10 minutes, it does stop you from simply checking anything inside quickly. The following compromises are common to anyone;
- have to set up to access internal storage, or crawl under bed area.
- need to use poles to setup awning, no ability to have a pole-less awning (does have a beach umbrella holder, but that is too small when it rains)
- struggled to close Camprite with all bedding setup (if only there was 2" more height in the roof section!)
I found the following things the really great points of the Camprite over other campers when I was buying:
- bedding stays set up for 4, can sleep 6 inside with bunks,
- carries 2 kayaks and 4 bikes with no need to unload when setting up for an overnighter,
- genuine no compromise offroad, will go anywhere you can drag it
- full metal outer cover, no covers to rip by branches, fully dustproof
I occasionaly regret selling my Camprite, but the reality is I can get my Quantum to the places I took the Camprite. Granted the Camprite will ultimately go further, but the reality is I haven't done a trip that you could take a camper and the Quantum couldn't make it - the Quantum is also a genuine offroader and it already has plenty of scratches to prove it.
Another reason we sold the Camprite is that after 4 years of ownership, we wanted something that was quicker to setup and had a few more luxuries. While the Camprite is very, very quick by camper trailer standards, it simply cannot compare to the Quantum - only the roof latches to undo and your done. Plus the added luxuries of the Quantum (shower, toilet, heater, a/c, great kitchen etc...) in a package only just over 1m longer than the Camprite (with bikes on) and we were sold.
I store the Quantum inside my garage (have a triple) and you can walk inside it whenever you want. To pack it up, I get the fridge running prior and the food goes straight into it and the pantry. All the clothes get packed into drawers, all this without stooping over or having to drag a camper outside. May seem trivial, but it means I do not hesitate to take it away even for a single night, have done that on many occasions now where I know I wouldn't have bothered with the Camprite due to the hassle to pack (soft aren't I
).
I have only had the use of the Quantum for 11 months and I have already racked up 51 nights away, a testament to how easy it is to pack up for a trip. When I bought the Quantum, I only had 4 "must-have" criterea, amongst the standard stuff like offroad ability etc... , but I should have added being abe to access storage without "opening" as a "must-have", not just a "like".
- outside kitchen (had a Windsor Rapid before and know we do NOT want inside kitchen)
- rollout awning (after Windosr and Camprite, the rollout was a must)
- shower/toilet, must be accessable without popping the roof (so good for roadside stops for my wife and daughter)
- sleeps 4 inside (hopefully my kids will migrate to a tent soon!!!)
Point being, the Camprite actually ticked most of my boxes and the only downside was the lack of toilet and the rolllout awning, plus the packing issues. We try and do a LOT of camping so any camper trailer will never be in the same league as a caravan for ease of packup, but we didn't want a caravan again. So the cross-over camper was the perfect choice for us, I am lucky enough that it was within our budget.
If I couldn't have had my Quantum, I would have stuck with the Camprite rather than have another Windsor Rapid or Jayco style camper. Have "been there, done that" and the compromises of them are such that, IMHO, the Camprite is a better choice.
Cheers
Captain