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ASI built camper tops for the VW Vanagon out of Seattle, WA. They were used on US and Canadian-imported VWs only. SO-22 "camping box" Period (1952–58). During this period no tent per se was available from Westfalia, but one could obtain a striped canvas awning that stretched almost the length of the vehicle and extended about six feet out to ...
The Brubaker Box was a car designed by Curtis Brubaker, Todd Gerstenberger and Harry Wykes. Brubaker got the idea from Volkswagen Minibuses , and attempted to update the concept. The body was designed to fit on the chassis of a Volkswagen Beetle .
Include an open cargo deck for transporting ATVs, motorcycles, etc. Off-road pop-ups Feature rugged construction and raised suspension for off road use. A-frame small solid wall folding camper. Flip-out camper Features a roof which flips over to become a bunk. Uses a tent roof instead of a hard roof. Forward fold, rear fold or double/dual fold. [7]
A campervan, also referred to as a camper, caravanette, motorhome or RV (recreational vehicle) in North America, is a self-propelled vehicle that provides both transport and sleeping accommodation. The term describes vans that have been fitted out, whereas a motorhome is one with a coachbuilt body.
Converted 2009 GMC Savana. A conversion van is a full-sized cargo van that is sent to third-party companies to be outfitted with various luxuries for road trips and camping. . It can also mean a full-size passenger van in which the rear seating have been rearranged for taxis, school buses, shuttle buses, and limo purposes in place of a family
The S minivans debuted the minivan design features of front-wheel drive, a flat floor and a sliding door for rear passengers. [31] [33] [34] The term minivan came into use largely compared to size to full-size vans; at six feet tall or lower, 1980s minivans were intended to fit inside a typical garage door opening. [35]
The Mitsubishi Town Box is a kei car (Town Box) and minivan (Town Box Wide) produced for the Japanese domestic market (JDM) by the Japanese automaker Mitsubishi Motors. It was initially available with the alloy - headed 4A30 657 cc inline-four engine , but switched to the 3G83 659 cc straight-three engine in 2002.
A pocket door is a sliding door that slides along its width and disappears, when open, into a compartment in the adjacent wall, or as in terms of vehicles, into the vehicle's bodywork. Pocket doors are used in some delivery vans, [ 3 ] as well as, for example, the Renault Estafette and Morris J4 , and train carriages, such as the London ...