![]() ![]() ![]() So if I had young kids I'd probably sacrifice the bit of space to have a van that feels pretty easy to drive around in the city. We did a lot of interesting day-trips that we probably wouldn't have without a place to rest, change clothes, make a little food, and use the toilet (a tiny portable but still better than the woods). I grew up with a Coachmen conversion van as my mom's daily driver, it was absolutely amazing for a busy kid's life. Still, unless the current demand for RVs spurs additional innovation, we're likely going to go with a Promaster high-top conversion floorplan like the Jayco Swift or Thor 20L, but not until maybe 2023, hoping the current freakout bubble chills out. Truma VarioHeat 90 energy efficient furnace, with silent operation and intelligent fan control. Honeycomb composite flooring provides and additional thermal break. All season RVing with all water lines fully enclosed inside the van. We've rented a high-top Promaster several times, and in Los Angeles at least it does not fit in a "regular" parking space because those usually have a couple inches shaved off here, and it feels like kind of a beast trying to navigate city/residential streets. The Solis Pocket includes the following all weather heating and cooling features: 1. The main difference that the size of this vehicle offers compared to standard class B RVs is a full dry bath. It is built into a Ford E350 chassis and measures 22 feet 6 inches long. ![]() Having a less-intimidating van we could use for daytrips would be amazing, though. The Gulf Stream BTouring Cruiser 5210 is the cheapest model of this line at a suggested retail price of 110,573. I'd love a pop-top but I'm also pretty set on a king-sized bed, which seems to be not a combo anybody is building and I am not in the mood to get it done aftermarket. (If I knew what to sacrifice to get VW to bring the California line to the US, I would do it on the spot.) It's just really hard to get a ready-built van with a pop-top and a toilet in the US, and I think Winnebago is the only big-name converter making them. I've been shopping in about the same feature range as you, and The Solis is probably my 2nd favorite - but it would be my #1 if I had more than two people, especially if one or more of them were not full-grown and would definitely be comfortable sleeping in the pop-top. ![]()
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