Real & Honest Review, 2021 A-Liner Scout Extreme Off Road, Popup Camper, Buyers Guide
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- čas přidán 1. 06. 2021
- Looking for a small camper? If you are considering the Aliner please watch this video. I spent a year searching and researching for the best fit for my needs. Everything you might want to know about them. Any questions comment below and I will do my best to answer.
All of the products I mention are located here in my Amazon influnencer Store. Absolutely no product here unless I have personally used it and like it!
amzn.to/34zBMV4 - Auta a dopravní prostředky
Thanks so much for the detailed review. There is no excuse for the problems you are having. The Aliners come at a premium and should not have the quality issues you spoke of. If it were half the price you paid, maybe it would be acceptable. I was considering one but not anymore. Really surprised the dealer did not know about the AC/Heater issue. Wow, unbelievabl
7 years now with Ranger 12, over 50 k on all types of terrain including 3k on the TAT. If you are using it off road be aware of the way the cabin is attached to frame with 1/4 inch self tapping screws. I've had to replace several as they shear at the head. Replace d with stainless steel. Have dealt with many other frame and cabin issues and corrected them successfully. Enjoyed video. Good luck with your Scout and happy trails. Our Ranger 12 still continues to serve us well.
Thank you for your very honest review. Didn't listen anybody else to be so honest . Refreshing to see there is at least one in the planet. Thanks again will help me big time. 👍
Thanks for an honest review. My wife and I are looking at the Ranger 12 and this helped us out tremendously .
Thank you for the honest review. Hubby and I are sticking with the truck and a tent for now until we find the right one for us.
Really well - nice review. Made me think of things I hadn't considered. Also like the mention of the non-Aliner stuff/gear as well. My compliments.
Really useful review; thoughtfully done. Thanks a ton for sharing your insights with the rest of us. Hope life in the great outdoors is still treating you well.
Thanks, you went over the type of stuff I notice but usually doesn’t get covered.
Great job with the tour and review! We Aliner Owners are a special group!
For a Camper that's under a half-year old, the number of issues are disappointing. I hope A-Liner can work with you to rectify/repair some of them. Happy Camping Brother !
Appreciate the detailed honest review!
Thanks for sharing this information, it was very helpful for others trying to decide on one of these. Stay safe, live life, Have peace.
Appreciate your thorough review. We looked at A-Liner back in 2016 but ended up with a Starcraft Comet hard side A-frame (which they have since quit making) mainly due to cost. I felt at the time that A-Liner was better built, but after seeing your video I’m not so sure. We’ve pulled our Starcraft more than 20K miles, lived in it for weeks at a time, with almost no issues. Anyway, it too has the Dolmetic heat pump and both heats (down into the 20’s) and cools exceptionally well. I’m thinking you should have yours checked out while under warranty. Similarly, our little fridge (Norcold) does an exceptional job and yours should perform better than it does IMO. Thanks for the review.
Nice vid. I have the Aliner Expedition 2017 model. The dealer talked me into paying extra for the 10000 BTU Bearcat a/c, explaining that the 5000 BTU wall unit couldn't keep up with the hot Florida summers. Glad I got it. In 100+ heat index, I keep it at around 75 during the day, and down around 70 to sleep. I could turn it down more, but that chills the camper too much for my comfort.
I would have the ac checked, because that Bearcat should turn your smaller rig into an icebox...tough those two plastic windows don't help in keeping the cold in and the heat out. If the Bearcat checks out ok, you might try cutting some type of insulation / reflective material to place on the windows. In my unit, I have two dormers which covers the windows completely when closed. And I do notice the difference when I extend them.
Nice compact rig. Thanks for the thorough overview.
I have a 2020 scout light with the off-road package works out really good I run everything in it off of my bluetti 200p... I can run my 5,000 BTU air conditioner all night on the economy mode also run my microwave Keurig machine toaster electric heater 650 w.
In the morning I run my Honda eu2000i to charge up the bluetti.. if I don't use the AC or the heater the bluetti will last for a couple days that things awesome... Great job on the video nice to hear the pros and cons...
Just picked up my eyeliner. Very used. It’s going to be a lot of work. Your video was fantastic for me. Thank you very much for doing that.
Thank you for making this video and giving us your honest thoughts and review. Seems I'm currently in the same situation you were in. I've been looking at different trailers for a while and have been leaning towards the A-Liner. I'm looking at trailers that will fit in my garage so I don't have to pay storage fees, which of course limits the options. I was looking at a couple from Taxa Outdoors (like the Tiger Moth), but I keep going back to the A-Liner since you can stand up in them. Thought I would like a tear drop style, until I got in one and realized how cramped they are. While I can sit upright at a table in the Tiger Moth, still cannot stand up which may make things like getting dressed annoying. Thank you again!
It'a beautiful A-liner! It's disappointing to witness such a serious decline in responsibility among RV dealers, but demand is high and their inventory low, so they get away with it. Hopefully you can get some of it dealt with at your dealership, the rest you'll be able to do over time. Still, it is one beautiful Scout you have! I love it....enjoy it to the max!
Not just the dealers. RVs are cheaply built for a couple reasons. One is light weight to allow towing by just about anything.
Second reason is greed.
I have a 2012 Aliner classic with the off-road package, and it has a little 5000btu LG window AC. I had to replace it once too and got the replacement from Lowe's. Just thought about it for an option for you. I feel the same way about my aliner and the shoddy Construction. I took mine in the backcountry of Big Bend National Park about a three-hour drive back in there. I broke a lot of things inside but the walls held up okay. Lol
Thanks for the review.
Very nice. You'd like where I live. Right in the middle of Pa. In the mtns. Not much around, power goes out frequently. Sometimes in the winter you can't get out. Extremely beautiful. Enjoy yourself.
leveling jacks, you should carry 4 little pieces of wood for extra stability under them. I did with mine and was glad I did.
Fun review and awesome to see virtually familiar scenery in an abundance of Summery green leaves, it's amazing.
Hope somewhere in the future you'll make a 1/10 scale version for one of your TF2's. Thank you for the video✌😎
This has been extremely helpful! Its terrible that it already has issues. I like the basic design, but I can't afford failing equipment.
Thanks for a great review, very helpful!
I borrowed a friend's A liner, and found it easy to tow, and given my car was only a 4 cylinder, I didn't think I was still towing it. On reaching the destination, it was a cinch to set up. Do the ends first, pop up the panel opposite the door, then do the door side. You just have to clip everything in. When my budget improves and my car is paid am going to get a loan for my own A liner. And setting the annex was pretty easy too. A lot of times, on the trip, I didn't bother about the annex, unless I was staying more than two days. I did do one thing different, I took my own mattress. Other than that, it's a great little van. I don't need all the bells and whistles built in, I took most of my own stuff.
Great review... Going to look at one tomorrow.
Great honest review. Thank you! Good luck.
Thanks! I am looking at the same unit, except the ac unit is more like a window unit vented out of the top of the storage unit by the door. I don't know how that will work out, but I am willing to give it a try. Thanks for sharing the information about the tank. None of the literature says that. I rented a Titanium model of this camper last year, and I found the same issue with the ac. It did have a 44-gallon tank on it.
Good information. Thanks for making the effort.
Great details, THANK YOU!!
Thanks for taking the time for your review. I've made mine completely self powered without any generator. Let me know if your interested and I'll be happy to share my design and pictures.
Thanks for the real and honest review. I just started looking at the Aliners last night, and liked the Expedition and LXE models. You mentioned the silicone seals were really applied/used poorly, now it makes me wonder about the quality and workmanship of their more higher-priced models. I guess, like you said, RVs are all poorly built.
Very thorough review. I only got half way through to make an informed decision - NO WAY.
I have an Aliner Scout too. I hardwired an inverter to to the battery wiring to run the fridge while I was driving. It sits in the fridge 'cabinet'. Might be able to plug it into that 12v socket by the fridge too. Rewired the solar port and take a suitcase panel with me to recharge the battery on site. I love my Aliner. Have had trailers and popups...this is my all time favorite. And yes, they leak in rain storms when down. Oddly, they don't when up.
Nice! I hadn’t thought about that. I could even make an adapter to use my jackery panel. Thanks for the info!
@@RCeveryday Aliner LXE owner here. A lot of campers are particle board. We've also taken ours down dirt roads to camp offgrid / boondocking. I also added a toolbox and put bigger battery in box. Where's your propane tank? I went with LP so the fridge runs on it while boondocking. A heat pump (the CoolCat) seemed overengineered to me so we went with propane heat & standard window unit AC.
Good review thanks for sharing.... I've often wondered how well those are built.... Hey with your refrigerator problem check into 12 volt refrigerators have 2 one is used for refrigerator and the other is a freezer..... Happy camping brother
Thanks for the video! Fellow Oklahoman here looking at the scout as a lightweight option to pull around with my minivan while my family travels.
Thanks for the review. You made me even happier that I went with a Chalet A-frame (built in Oregon) instead of an Aliner. I don't have the Chalet's off road road version (called trail boss) but my stock A-frame looks way more sturdy than your rig. I couldn't believe what they put your spare tire on. I can't imagine that bumper holding up with even light off-roading over time. My frame is substantially thicker than yours too. I have recently added a 4 in. lift and 14 in. General Grabber tires and will also add front shocks to handle the bouncing around on dirt and rocky roads. I do have a propane system and love the propane furnace and propane frig. I keep everything charged up with a fixed 80 watt solar and 220 fold out solar.. I also have a water tank but never use it. It's a 2016 and in the years I've had it not one leak or system failure. Extremely well built RV.
Is chalet in business any more?
@@teresas7272 Yes they are.
@@teresas7272 it doesn’t appear they are in business anymore unfortunately…
@@CruiserRecovery From what I recent info I received, the new owner is rebuilding the business, has a new factory, but waiting for the right moment to begin manufacturing again. I do hope the new owner rebuilds the business. The Chalet owners club is willing to work with him to make their campers an even better product.
@@oldmillrd8153 awesome news. It didn’t look good when I looked up their website
Offroad camper may be my next Scale project! Nice looking trailer!
Do not buy an Aliner.. See my comments on Chalet A-frames. above.
i deleted my weight question when i saw you had it appear in the video, we have a 6 x 14 by 6 ft interior cargo trailer that we made into a camper, just shy of 3 grand for the trailer, window a/c we installed, counter, portable pottie, 2 butane stoves, full size bed, propane shower and a back up battery powered shower, we use it as a toy hauler/camper for our can-am my wife wants to buy a runaway rouser tiny camper for her jeep renegade, they are built in ocala, florida, we live in zephyrhills, florida, just north of tampa, we agree, the sunrays are junk, check out the runaway rouser,
you can use pool noodles for the gaps or seams to help keep the draft out.cut the noodles in half long
If you ever have a chance to look at the Jayco A Frame series and what your impression of that build quality is like it would be great! Your video on this particular A Frame was very helpful in such a way that anyone looking to purchase now or in the future will be glad to know about the lack of the water tank and the battery that will not power everything. I know I was! I have a pop up and would like something hard wall but foldable and the A frame is what I am interested in.
On the Harbor Freight tool box I never used the lock it came with because it is to easy to defeat. I bought two locking hasp’s with identical keys and mounted them on either side of the original lock. The dissuades a their from an easy mark and they mostly will move on.
Thanks for this good evaluation .
Appreciate your review! I am in the market for an A-Liner and am working on trying to figure out which to pick up for a cross country trip! I have a Mazda 2016 CX-5 FWD with 2K cap towing. I’d be lying if I was nervous about picking up one of these let alone a slightly larger one at 1400 pounds.
Had the Aligner ranger 10 off-road, had the double propane tanks in the front in reflection I probably didn’t need that much the tongue weight was horrendous. Also pretty drafty at night. Ended up selling it my wife was not enthusiastic on how it looked. I thought it was cool it really had kind of a log cabin camping feel and all the windows was really nice. Plenty of room to move around in and easy to tow and back up with it being folded down.
I love my Ranger 12
Ps. Might want to look into special 3M tape for those bubble windows, and get them sealed really well as they are notorious for leaking in time. I found out the hard way on a trip in a downpour.
Great review & thanks for the honesty. I've been looking at travel trailers for a year & a half & at ALiners specifically for a few months now. If anything, you've convinced me not to buy one because it just wouldn't fit my needs. You're right, there is very little info on this brand out there & I know a lot of people love them but based on your info about the length of the nose (having to unhook to turn around), the fridge not getting cold, etc. I'd just rather put the money I'd spend on this on some better van upgrades & just be fully self contained. I wasn't crazy about having a pull behind in the first place & was just looking for something as small as possible (to shut both my family & potential travel partner up...lol). Fantastic job on the video & thanks for making it longer & not skimping on the details. That being said, you do have a really beautiful camper & a perfect piece of land to enjoy it on. Very much appreciated!
Note that fridge doesn’t have the option of propane. I think having a three way fridge/propane option would make a huge difference. Most of their models are three way.
I am in the same boat! Been looking for 2 years now and not any reliable info out there on A-liners. This video has been the best so far. I like towing something smaller and an easy set up. I am 70 and want to be independent on camping. So appreciate his honesty. Guess I’ll keep looking!
Great review. No sugar-coating. You might be better off putting the spare tire in the back of your pickup but that doesn't solve the problem of the rear stabilizers dragging. Also I would try some throw pillows behind your low back when you sit and I think you'll solve the seatback angle problem. Like you said it's not perfect for your needs but it's the best thing out there.
A lot of your comments deal with the A-liner's deficiencies as an "extreme off-road" vehicle. I wonder if there are any small trailers made that would work any better. It seems to me a camper top for your pickup would have been an option. You didn't mention those at all. Why did you rule those out?
Excellent review. Liked video and subscribed to your channel.
Brillant, useful review.
thank you for the review!
Great review. I have been trying to research Aliners as I feel it is a camper that I could handle by myself. The Ac/heat issue has me backing off a bit along with the issues of doors not lining up. That just shouldn’t happen with a brand new model. As a woman camping alone, security is my biggest issue and why I want hard sides all around. No canvas.
Nice camper there man!👌😎👍enjoy it!
Nice real world review. Its a pity that don't provide Quality as an Option :) - they are so close, but just need people to spend a bit more time and take some more care with the sealing and aligning stuff when they screw things together. RV builds scare me as well, ALiner did take a good approach of avoiding particle board etc.
You may want to lift up the bed and take a good look at how they ducted that A/C unit. Another guy on Popup Portal has been going back and forth with ALiner with how they put the A/C in. They left out a duct, its dripping. Kind of a mess. Good Luck!
thanks for your review.
Good video, thank you. Slim Potatoe Head sold me on the concept a few years ago. I am 6'2" and the space seems very generous compared to other campers. I wonder if his had the fit and finish problems that you see, has the craftmanship deteriorated at the factory? The heat/AC heat pump sounds like a good idea, too bad it just doesn't work. Slim did some crazy cold camping once trying out a diesel heater, outside, ducted into the camper. That would be something I might try. Thanks for your honest evaluation of the A-Liner.
I was told they have since sold the brand and things are better but can’t verify. But honestly buying a new camper and having to modify all the systems like heat and fridge we’re out of the question. It should have worked out of the box. From what I watched of his setup his rig is older and hopefully better constructed.
I would take a felt adhesive pad that you can get for the bottom of a table or chair leg and put it on the back of the bracket that you hang your garbage bag from to protect the cupboard. Or glue a piece of leather.
I've been looking for a small camping trailer for me and my dogs. It's been tough because I've lost out on a few good ones. I just don't know enough to be driving the distance I'm willing to. Usually by the time I find one, start looking it up, it's gone. Had a problem yesterday where I was more than willing to drive six hours for it, but someone came to look at it and bought in person while I was asking her about the title requirements. I think you should scrap the fridge and put the cabinet from the other side in it's place. Then get a better fridge with a separate freezer and put it where the cabinet was. An electric single or dual burner will get you where you need to be for cooking. A small toaster oven that stows away would be good too. I was looking at an A-liner Classic and wanted to see more info - that's how I found your video. If I had private land, I'd be all over that, but I will be fine with a small camper in a state park for now lol. I like the option of pulling out my tent and camping in that and go inside if I want. From the bathrooms I've seen in ads, I'm either not going to be able to fit in there to use it or I won't be able to get out because the toilet is so low to the ground and the walls close in on you. On your own land, make your own latrine. You can also use a bucket with a pool noodle around the edge to sit on and put some kitty litter in it (trash bag then litter lol). Make sure it has a tight lid and keep it on hand for those emergencies. I saw a funny video yesterday about a guy who hooked up PVC piping to a cooler. the pipes extended up and a hula hoop clamped at the top. He then put a shower curtain on the hula hoop. He was walking around a beach asking for $4 if people had to go to the bathroom, but that's beside the point hahaha! I'm just saying, people have creative ideas out there. For the cushions, go to Amazon and look up wedge pillows. I would probably buy covers for the cushions myself, but you can makeshift your own set up with smaller wedges to have the cushion slant the way you want.
I just saw, (on 1 of these videos), a woman purchased a solar panel w/peel and stick backing. Might be something worth looking into.
This gave me some useful information. I need the basics & I like the room & table, bed. You enlightened me. I have a 2012 Kia Sorento V6 but wonder if this would be something I could tow.
with a v6 it should pull it fine. Only issue will be the lift on the offroad version. The top of this one sets higher than the bed sides on my lifted jeep gladiator on 37's. These things are a lot bigger in person.
Seems like a pretty nice little camper😉👍👍🐕
Get a longer hitch or buy a hitch extension to solve that short tongue issue
I have the same issue with one of my smaller utility trailers makes pulling it much more enjoyable
Makes a nice portable cabin though. I've been through trailers and class c's. Now I'm looking at a simple basic Aliner.
Nice review! In my opinion Aliner screwed up when they went with the cool cat. You also have to watch out for the condensation when it is working on A/C. The original 500 btu room A/C they had can be run with a 1200watt generator. And keeps it super cold. Just to be nice I'll assume you scanned my channel when you were researching...LOL
i agree
Very informative video.
Really great review! I've been wanting one of these for quite some time - just waiting hoping the RV craze will take a turn and would have a chance to purchase a used one. Honestly, after watching this, I think they're the same crappy, poorly made RV like all the rest seem to be. Very disappointing isn't it? But now that I see this, I can make an honest decision though. So I'll have to take my 'rose colored glasses' off now, about this RV too. Really appreciate your great review! Thanks
Susan, find a used Chalet A-frame if you can find one (new one's are a 1 year wait). Much, much better build quality than the Aliners.
If we the real gear head guys built stuff the way we wanted them to be there would be no profit to be made as it would be overbuilt and very expensive because of materials. But how great it would be.
@@gunsandrotors8704 Hiker Trailer seems to build good quality at a reasonable price point. They specialize in offroad Teardrops. Camp-Inn makes a good product at a low price point. Hiker, Camp-Inn and many other manufacturers will build yours to order.
I think most guys would be happy with a rugged trailer that could hold all their gear, plus have a bed already made. A lot of the trailers seem to be aimed at wives who don't want to break a fingernail (and why should they), and so a lot of things I wouldn't care about end up being on the list of options. A lot of guys only do camprs at all because they want to take their wife with them. A girlfriend will fake it and tell you she loves sleeping on the ground next to you. A wife won't.
But they can get us guys, too. By the time I've got the insulated box, high-performance suspension, fancy wheels and tires, the price can get pretty high.
A lot of these companies are pretty good one-man or small-team, and all the money goes straight to the craftsmen doing the work. But for instance Hiker appears to be trying to scale up their operation, with a plant or plants in Indiana, which is known for the kind of shoddy construction you're complaining about. They start trying to mass-produce something that's almost innately hand-made, and they've gotta find people to work on the assembly line. Then they need people to run the books and payroll, taxes. Next thing you know, the company's mostly stuffed shirts who never roll up their sleeves and build trailers. Some bean-counter will say "Buy all fasteners from company X because they're the cheapest." The corporate office will love the guy, because more profit for the same amount of work, but the things fall apart in 5 years. Doesn't matter. He already got his promotion and now he's gonna hire a PR team to put the kibosh on complaints. Heh. Of course, if they get big enough, they'll need to hire a diversity officer to ensure compliance with the slogan of the month. Before you know it, a tent trailer costs $100,000 and falls apart in 6 months. LOL! 50 people working in the office and one immigrant working in the shop!
@@oldmillrd8153 My fishing buddy bought a Chalet, so his wife would agree to join him on his camping trips. It DID seem to be a very solid build.
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We went from the Aliner Scout Lite to a Casita Travel Trailer. You mentioned TX. Since you’re there, maybe you can check them out. 🤷🏻♂️
I had the Forrest River Rockwood A122THESP, like I said on the gram bubble windows became a huge problem. They are essentially glued on. I traded in on a 1700BH Winnie all complaints are gone except one. I bought it used its red and now I'm fighting oxidation. Wish it was white. The A-frames are great to tow, meet the bear regulations, and easy to store. Like you have found they still need some refinement. Next biggest quam for me on A-frame "No Awning".
True. I’m already brainstorming a pivoting mount for an awning. Once the new wears off more I may give it a shot.
@@RCeveryday pahaque.com/collections/trailer-shades/products/a-frame-visor < I considered when I had an a-frame
thank you very much for the info. take care
A brand new trailer that leaks! OMG!
The manufacturer should address this!
Regarding the build/fit/finish problem is the year it was constructed. The COVID period had a lot to do with qualified workers on hand.
thanks well explained
Your sides are made of a composite called Azdel. Good stuff.
Solid review...
Great video- seems like you made the right choice. I'm in the same ballpark as you - get out away from the hoards and enjoy the back woods. I run a 2 door Wrangler, looked at the Aliner, but was a little heavy. Went with the Gulfstream trail lite now called the trail boss, not many out there, fully off grid "square drop" and fiberglass. I love it, but it's small, which I ok. I'm curious what heater is in there. I camp in single digits with no issue. Might be a simple reset switch or loose wire. Be well
They sounds like a much better system. This thing had the heat pump/ac setup. Just doesn’t operate at 40 degrees and below. Lol. Sold it to camping world last year after I moved. Once I started storing it outside all the seals started deteriorating quickly.
Greetings from down under..Excellent review ..not many real "long term " reviews out there. I'm in the process of purchasing a used Aliner here in OZ. Have noticed water is a major problem , especially in the corners and floor . Looked at one the other day , and could put my fingers through the particlboard floor . I hope the post 2004 versions are better with the plywood flooring . My needs are smallish and light ..plus something a little different , so the ALINER is my decision. I'm lucky because I can do all my own repair work , having restored houses in my past career . Despite its many problems I am going to buy an ALINER. I'm 73 and like you I have felt a little uncomfortable with a lot of the human race ..especially in the last 3 yrs....so getting away from some of it sounds like a good idea ...my favourite saying from the 1960s ...STOP THE WORLD I WANT TO GET OFF...LOL. well get away for a while . Take care and all the best ...
Much love Chris. The world is learning.
Five years ago I was just about to pull the trigger on a new Aliner when I found a used Chalet aframe locally. Chalet was a small company in the Northwest and in my opinion has superior build quality. The moment that I set foot in the Chalet it felt solid vs the Aliner which felt flimsy. The Chalet has a tubular steel frame, composite floors and a really solid build. The wiring is all neat, the components high quality and the cabinets are solid. It uses automotive rubber seals vs foam in the Aliner and is really tight with no bugs or water infiltration ever. Mine is a Trail Boss version with 4,000 lb axle, leaf springs and it's lifted. It also has a 10k btu Coolcat AC/heatpump, furnace, hot water heater, etc. Everything is heavy duty from the frame to the steps and stabilizers. It was 6 years old when I bought it and had been sitting in a lot so it needed a bit of restoration work and I'm really glad that I did it. This thing has been over river beds, all kinds of forest service roads and even some non-roads with virtually no issues at all. I've done a lot of mods including adding shocks, heavy duty shackles, heated lithium batteries and a 12 volt fridge. I never hesitate to take this little camper anywhere. The aframe concept works great when executed well and there are many advantages to having something this small, easy to tow yet comfortable inside. Chalet built these things very well and if you can find a used one I highly recommend it. They are mostly in the western states and I don't think that Chalet manufactures any longer. Another small RV company that didn't survive the past few years I guess. At 12 years old, this rugged little camper is still going strong.
Ha Ha the old KoolCat , They don't work when you need them most . Had one in my Rockwood A frame ,less then 45 degrees and they stop working . Plus mine was right under the bed ,so wakes you up every time it goes on . Thanks
Great review I own a 2016 ALiner scout. I do wish it was an easier way to keep those bubble windows clean and unfortunately my windows do not have the screens. Perhaps you already received this to or knew of it but they do have these refrigerator battery-operated blowers that you put on the top shelf to circulate the cold air and to allow your refrigerator to function much better. I think you answered my concern as to where I was getting some water in when I arrive at a site or after we’ve had some rain have you done or plan to do anything to correct the leaking if you have what tips do you recommend.
I haven’t addressed the leaking yet. I keep it stored indoors for now. My plan for it is just going to get wild on it with a tube of silicone. I have already had to reseal one of my corner “bumper” pieces after I bumped a tree. My plan for the fridge may be just do without it for now. I’m wanting to add more batteries and some fixed solar, eventually looking at 12v fridge options.
Awesome thorough review! I subscribed because I like aliners and rc stuff. Im going to buy an aliner this year. Can you tell me is that a full size bed? Is it uncomfortable with 2 people? Also it shouldn't be to hard to stick a little water tank and pump under the sink.. Thanks!
The bed is just a few inches shy of a queen size. I am 6'3" with my feet touching the wall my hair barely touches the other side. There is a ton of space under the bed opposite from the AC unit that would be perfect for a water tank setup as well.
Tag xl…loved it, built by the Amish.
Where did you get that tool box? it looks like it fits perfectly. how do you anchor it on?
My main concern is leaking. Out East, it always rains and leaking is definitely a deal breaker 😢
Thank you for making this. I was just about to pull the trigger on one and now I'm thinking maybe not. I mean, everything has it's compromises, but rain inside isn't one I'm willing to deal with anymore.
I wonder if a tarp over the top wouldn't do the trick. I have stayed in the forest over night in a hammock under a cheap plastic taro many times. Came out of the forest dry.
I have a 2014 A-Liner Ranger 12 and my experience has been more positive. The refrigerator isn't very good but I have had none of the other issues mentioned in this review. No water at all and the heating and cooling work great and work fast.
There has to be something wrong with that air conditioner. Looking online it is a 10,000 BTU unit. It should turn that little area into a block of ice in 30 minutes regardless of the temperature outside. I run a 6,000 BTU air conditioner in my uninsulated garage and it keeps it cool during Florida summers.
It isn’t an air conditioner. It is an air source heat pump. You can get an air conditioner on aliners but this isn’t one.
@@juniperdog5523 an air source heat pump is an air conditioner. Usually that's sort of terminology is reserved for something that can run in reverse a cycle and also be used as a heater but an air source heat pump basically the definition of what we would call an air conditioner normally. It uses a compressor to compress gas which is then evaporated across a coil transferring heat to the gas as evaporates and that is recondensed in a condenser transferring that heat to the outside air. At any rate that's irrelevant because 10,000 BTU is 10,000 BTU no matter what method of heat transfer is used.
The AC on my Ranger 12 works great and fast.
Wow amazing😍😍😍
Nice trailer
I love you Silverado!
Great review, thanks! I'm considering the same level of Aliner and appreciate your observation your 6'3" frame can sit at the table with the bubble windows providing some headroom. Guess I need to experience this at the RV lot to be sure. Question about the AC/HeatPump... those ducts are under the bed so can you please comment on how well the air circulates when a supple and return duct are both near each other underneath the bed? I think I'm appreciating the little window type in some models so at least the AC output flows up into the A frame.
It did not flow well, I used a small rechargeable fan pointed up from the floor to pull air into the top of the camper.
Thank you for the review, did you consider the Taxa Cricket (more money)?
I hadnt even seen those. They are a lot more, $30k-40K I was only shopping $15k and under.
I think RVs or campers the quality depends on how deep your pockets are, or if you got one built on a Friday. Pretty sure the fit and finish on the $200K and up Earthroamers is pretty top notch. The setup I have been thinking about is an off road friendly slide in camper, but mount it on a goose neck trailer so I have room for a full size trail truck. Just me, the wife and a dog so don't need something huge.
Pretty honest review of the sort of off road ready camper.
Great Review, thank you for sharing. I am doing a lot of my own research also as i hope to be getting some kind of camper in a few years for solo camping ( just me). I will not need or ever use the heater/AC or the fridge, do you know if these can be custom ordered with our these and save some money? Where i will be going and what i will be doing it is just a shelter for the night and that's about it. So all the bells and whistles are not needed or wanted.
I am not sure. From my 2021 brochure it shows everything as an option on the scout and smaller scout lite. Being a smaller company id imagine they would build it however youd like it.
You should look into the Aliner Scout Lite. Based on what you said, that may be a good fit for you.
I wish you would build something to camp in that is light and well made and maybe think about manufacturing it.
I am very seriously looking into this exact model because i want to be outside and if you get something just small enough it forces you outside more!!!
I have been looking at these also. Main concern I have is with the a/c. Would you say this type of system wouldn't keep you cool on a 90 degree day with high humidity? I see some still have the a/c mounted in the side but I like this design, no noise right in your sitting area. Some others have said the one in the wall cools better but idk. Thanks!
It is definitely noisy being all inside. Vibrates the entire camper. It didn’t circulate air well when the bed was extended. Seemed to block the vents. Used it a few time in near 100 degree temps and when I stood up inside it was hot up high. Plus being remote and running off a generator it just couldn’t keep up.
Are the 4 jacks just stabilizing jack or can you actually use them to level the RV.?
One thought on the seat cushion. You could Velcro a piece of a pool noodle on the bottom to I’ve the rear cushion a natural slant.
I camp on pretty un level surfaces and I’m able to get it pretty level with them. I did bend one on my last outing. Might have had it a bit too high.
Talk about the inverter. Like the video
I think he meant to say "converter." It changes the generator's 110 volts AC to 12 volts DC in order to charge the trailer's house battery.
I can hear the buyers remorse. I saw another review and my first thought with all the flips and flaps how well does it keep out the rain. Not well I guess.