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Typically built on heavy-duty truck or bus chassis Class B (Semi-integrated) Motorhome: 17 to 23 ft (5.2 to 7.0 m) Typically vans with elevated rooflines Class C (Alcove) Motorhome: 20 to 30 ft (6.1 to 9.1 m) Typically built on cutaway pickup or van chassis with bunk over cab area Truck camper: Insert: 8 ft (2.4 m) or more
A truck camper. A truck camper is a living space unit that is temporarily mounted into the bed of a pickup truck or flatbed ute and secured against any tipping or wobbling while the truck is in motion. Great care must be taken in matching the weight and center balance point of the truck camper with the capabilities of the pickup truck itself in ...
A truck camper A truck camper customized for beach driving and offshore fishing A truck camper customized for beach driving and offshore fishing. In North America, the term truck camper and its abbreviation TC are generally used to refer to any recreational vehicle or RV that may be carried in the bed of a pickup truck.
Two Class C motorhomes, built on (left) Freightliner Sprinter and (right) Ford E-Series chassis. Dethleffs alcove motorhome. Motorhomes usually have sleeping spaces for two to eight people. Each sleeping space is either fixed or converted from another part of the motorhome's interior, usually a fold-out sofa. A kitchenette area contains cooking ...
This Ford E350 SRW cutaway van chassis has a delivery truck body typical of that used in truck rental fleets. Cutaway van chassis also found a popular application for delivery vehicles and small trucks. They featured a size and weight capacity similar to the earlier step van model trucks and more of an automobile style cab area.
Cortez Motorhome was a Class-A motor coach made in the United States between 1963 and 1979, with 3,211 units built.. The Clark Forklift Company began making these small motorhomes in 1963 in Battle Creek, Michigan, and are commonly referred to as Clark Cortez motorhomes.
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.
Bedford CA ambulance. Curved windscreens were expensive in the early 1950s, and until 1958 the CA used a "split-screen" windscreen. Bedford CA panel van Bedford CA pickup As the 1960s progressed, the Bedford CA chassis found itself used as the basis for an increasingly flamboyant succession of motor homes such as this 1965 Dormobile Debonaire.