FJ Cruisers of Northern California
So tomorrow at 3:00am the wife and I are headed down to Upland, California and the official office of SoCal teardrops to pick up our Krawler 459. The plan is to make a big U turn in upland and head up by the Kern River and find a site to camp for the night. If there is still daylight out I want to try and get some flyfishing in around little Kern River and see if I can’t tackle one fish off of the Heritage Fishing Challenge List (Little Kern Gold Trout), if all goes well I will get the Kern Rainbow the following morning but I’m a little worried about the flows being too fast. After that we are heading to the Kings River and finally home:
So enough about fish…what about the trailer?
The decision about the trailer came after much deliberation, I think I can say that no stone went unturned when I was doing the research on what was the best fit for me. Here are some my key factors that went into choosing a manufacturer:
1. Quality of Workmanship/History of Quality
2. Simplicity of Design
3. Off road capability (should be capable of a 6/10 rated trail…no Rubicon! :-))
4. Level of comfort
I knew I wanted something small and capable that would provide an enclosed environment to sleep in. I looked at a variety of manufactures including:
While I liked the Vision of XpoTrail, it really appeared to me that it would be a few years before they would have a solid production model that had worked out all of the kinks in the design and fabrications process.
Moby1 Looked pretty interesting but I just didn’t see the attention to detail that I would have liked and I’m not sure they really had a History of Quality. Although they had a very tempting pricepoint which did give me a second…third..and fourth look.
LittleGuy trailers looked like a viable option, but I got a feeling that they were somewhat more mass produced and honestly I hated the guy who they had selling their products on the youtube videos…too much of a sleezeball and not enough adventurer.
So that left me with two viable options that really fit well into my overall criteria – the Adventure Trailer Teardrop and the Socal Krawler 459. As I researched this I could not help but note the similarities, and after asking and researching there is a relationship between SoCal Teardrops (SCT) and Adventure Trailers (AT). Essentially SCT provides AT with the teardrop which AT then drops onto their chassis. I’m not sure who does the additional modifications as the both offer similar modifications to the actual teardrop itself, more stuff comes standard on the AT version, but it also has a higher starting price. Being the excel jockey that I am, I started running the numbers and it turns out after you crunch the numbers and compare everything the AT one is a little more pricy then a similarly equipped SCT.
Why is the AT more expensive? My guess would be their advanced suspension. It is some fancy stuff, but that ultimately ended up being what drove me away from Adventure Trailers….the suspension is much more fancy then anything I need (I’m probably one of the few who has not upgraded to Icons ). Really though it was about simplicity…the FJ is a complicated machine as it is, the least the trailer can do is be simple!
So I ended up getting the SCT Krawler, of course I upgraded a few things. Here are some of the options that I went for:
• LED light Package
• 4 Jerry Can Holders
• Tongue Box
• Interior Vent Fan
• Interior tie Down System (for gear lol!)
• Group 31 battery tray
• Kitchen Upgrade
And probably a handful of other things.
I decided to bring my own battery (Sears Platinum Deep Cycle) and wheel and tires (33 inch so they can swapped into the FJ if needed).
Will post once we pick it up. Happy Trails!
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Congrats Esty! I really like those teardrops. Looking forward to seeing it out this summer.
Very Nice!!
I almost got one about 5 years ago after getting the FJ... Good thing I did not cuz I would have out grown it by now !! hehehe
I cannot wait to see it on the trails
do you have it yet?
how 'bout now?
...now?
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