How Much Camper Can We Fit On An Overlanding Motorcycle Trailer?

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There’s a conundrum for those that want a camper yet want to experience the true peacefulness and solitude of the true outdoors. The bigger you get, the less you can stray from the paved path.

Sure, you can buy some forty-foot-long rig, but you won’t be going into the silent woods or open valleys with something that big. No, you’ll likely be stuck at a packed campground ten feet away from similar monster motorhomes, some featuring four kids racing dirt bikes around in circles while Live Bullet album plays at full volume from outdoor speakers. Nothing wrong with Bob Seger, but that might not be my idea of communing with nature at ten o’clock at night.

It isn’t like people haven’t tried making big overlanders. While off roading in the challenging hills of the Rowher Flats, David Tracy famously found the million-dollar 27North motorhome stranded with a broken driveshaft. 27North has likely worked out solutions to this and other issues of taking a nine-ton machine into situations where only Jeep Wranglers dare to tread, but it’s still a big ask for something to do that.

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David Tracy

 

Even if they do work out all the problems, it doesn’t matter for most of us since if we had a million bucks we’d spend it on a nice, big primary house first and not a camper (or, well, a small million-dollar two-bedroom house in a not-so-great area of Los Angeles, or a closet of an apartment in San Francisco).

Tow The Line

Now, the vehicle probably best suited to getting to the far reaches of the wilderness is also the least able to adapt to becoming a camper or towing one: a motorcycle. Something with two wheels and a small frame does not suit itself to creating an indoor living space of any kind, though some have tried. There have been odd “camper motorcycle” concoctions like the Motohome concept below which looks like it would tip over on you at the first stoplight. I’d rather use the part where I assume you’re supposed to sleep as a place to put a JATO takeoff assist rocket to really set some acceleration records.

Meet Motohome The Bolt On Motorcycle Camper
MotoHome

 

You can, in fact, buy motorcycle camper trailers; usually they’re of the pop-up variety to create a sleeping space. There’s a few problems with these things. First, how much can a motorcycle realistically tow? As Mercedes Streeter pointed out a little while back a number of bike manufacturers simply tell you flat out not to do it at all, voiding your warranty if you do such shenanigans burning out a clutch while trying to start on a hill. The second and bigger issue is that you’re never going to tow one of these boxes while overlanding through the brush on dusty trails. I can see someone cutting between two closely-spaced trees, forgetting about the trailer and flying over the handlebars when the whole business stops in its tracks.

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Easy Rider Campers , Kompact Kamp Trailers

 

No, most motorbike off-the-grid camping people use tents, and there are plenty to choose from like the one below by Lone Rider. With a weight of only eight pounds it must be easy to carry; setting it up hopefully isn’t too much a chore, but it just isn’t the same as a camper where you’re asleep and off of the ground in a few minutes after you stop as you would do with any kind of camper.

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Lone Rider

 

To create a useable motorcycle camper, I think our best bet is to find the most useable motorcycle trailer we can find for overlanding duties. There is such a trailer that Mercedes Streeter reminded me of that she profiled a while back. Called the Pasq, it’s a single wheeled unit with a unique connecting mechanism attaching it to the bike to allow for a full range of motion that a standard hitch just can’t provide. Narrow, lightweight, and with a full six-and-a-half inches of suspension travel, it’s ideally suited to letting off roading bikers do off roading biker things unburdened.

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Mercedes Streeter

 

Still, this trailer looks absolutely nothing like the basis for any type of thing you might call a “camper”, but you’d be wrong.

 

The Trail Snail?

Look, we know that we’re never going to get a bathroom and a big screen TV a motorcycle camper, but could we at least get the basics like storage, eating/cleaning capabilities and space to sleep? I think we might. First, take a look at the Pasq trailer. It’s only about three feet long at most, and a bed has to be at least six feet or so. You’d have to double the length, and how would you ever make that happen? Think about it- how do you get a double page spread in a magazine? You open it 180 degrees; that’s what we’ll do here.

Once you disconnect the trailer from your bike, you’d use the leveler legs to stabilize it.

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Then, as you fold the unit open, not only would it double is size, but a half-round accordion-style cover would form over the sleeping surface like a big Slinky toy.

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Next, you slide out the telescopic extensions of the cover and drape the folded-up tent material over it, which now gives you a covered area next to the bed, and a zippered side cover curtain (there’s a fixed wall on the side of the sleeping space with zip-open screen).  Now you have an arch-topped living space that’s about seven feet by five feet with ceiling height in the center.

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We could lean into the shell-like shape and call it the Trail Snail. As an option, a little basin might be concealed under the bed to pivot out (it could also contain a cooktop BUT I don’t want the liability- you would have to leave the side covers open if you would even consider using it).

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Floor Plan 3 5

When you’re ready to move, the whole thing rather easily folds back up and connects to you bike. You’ll note that there’s space for saddle-bag type lightweight storage on the sides of the unit, as well as places to hold containers for water or fuel just like on the current Pasq trailer.

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It Ain’t The Ritz

No, it certainly isn’t. But, having a thirty-five square foot cabin in the woods beats crawling around on the ground in a tent.

Best of all, moving this living space around with you won’t compromise your ride as badly as you’d think. You can take it to places far, far more remote than a camper with slide-outs and a satellite dish ever will; places where you can be the one deciding if you want to hear Beautiful Loser and Katmandu blasting on not.

Relatedbar

A Daydreaming Designer Revisits A Curious ‘Motorhome’ Project – The Autopian

Our Daydreaming Designer Imagines A ‘Drop Down’ Camper To Replace Evel Knievel’s Aston Martin ‘Coffin’ – The Autopian

How Our Daydreaming Designer Would Turn A Scion xB Into A Delightful Camper – The Autopian

Our Daydreaming Designer Imagines A Cybertruck-Shaped Camper Trailer That Almost Makes Sense – The Autopian

A Daydreaming Designer Imagines If Airstream Made An Actual Car In The Seventies – The Autopian

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28 thoughts on “How Much Camper Can We Fit On An Overlanding Motorcycle Trailer?

  1. Hey, I’m Rod Holmes, the founder of Pasq. Just to be clear, the company is Pasq and the trailer Mercedes wrote up is our ADV1 (short for ADVenture touring, model 1). We have plans to make trailers for cruisers, enduros, and even e-bikes.

    It’s so thrilling to see smart people thinking/playing/dreaming based on our design. Thank you Bishop! It’s a huge honor to be on Autopian again.

    A quick update on the ADV1…we are making our beta test trailers as I type. We have selected 10 people who will get a beta trailer in late April and have two months to pull it/beat it up for at least 1000 miles. Once we get their feedback, we go into production. We hope to be delivering production ADV1s by mid- to late summer.

    We’ll be showing the beta trailers in June at the BMW MOA Rally and the Touratech Rally. There will be others, but those are what we have booked for now. If you have any suggestions on where we should show up or have a booth, let me know.

    1. Hello Rod- glad you like the thinking! Really impressed with the design and had to look at how to push it even further (even if my ideas are half-baked at best!).

      Glad to hear that you have big plans, and happy to see people that unlike me are willing to do more than just draw new concepts, but actually make them a reality.

      1. I started the ADV1 with very similar drawings as yours. (Here is the very first mockup.) I then made a PVC prototype…and then things got serious.

        Who knows…once we get the ball rolling, maybe we can work together to make your idea come to life. For the past two years I’ve been going to Overland Expos, and big bike rallies displaying the ADV1 and collecting feedback and ideas. The #1 request for the ADV1 is bicycle mounts. #2 is a tent system. I know there is demand!

        Don’t hesitate to reach out. I love to talk! rod@ the domain of our website (which you already know).

  2. Love the design, I only have one suggestion. I’m surprised it isn’t mentioned here. Why not fold the clamshell out towards the rear so you can leave the bike connected? With stabilizers there’d be no issue and pack-up in the morning would be that much quicker. Be great for long distance riders that want to make/break camp fast.

  3. Cool Design, I like motorcycle camping, I don’t do it enough, but that’s because I don’t take enough time off of work. Im just a tent camper, Right now my kit is heavily Amazon based. The tent stood up to one bad night of storms but I’ve seen the tent fail with heavy rains (Thanks Outdoor Gear Review).I ended up camping near MT Washington last year because the hotel rates were so sky high, on top of it a lot of the hotels were 2 night minimums. I got a Hip camp with a shower for a fraction of the cost.

  4. I like it. I’d swap all the unique breakable components (lights/lenses) for more generic trailer parts though. Only a matter of time till you tip it over. I’d also consider adding a “exoskeleton” frame around the outside, like the Pasq has. Not only does it provide protection, it’s basically a universally adaptable area to lash down stuff. Heck, I’d probably take a more generic trailer that doesn’t include a tent. I’d just pack my own tent that could be much bigger than this…

      1. Yeah, that was nuts. Glad they discussed how un-safe they felt and how they basically stopped /rested to wait out the wind. As the IronButt dudes say, ‘the more you stop the longer you can ride…’ or something.

    1. She couldn’t find anything this weird. The Pasq trailer is what she reminded me about and literally told me to “make a camper out of this”. My guess is she was (understandably) just trying to make me go away, but I actually did it.

  5. I wish it was Live Bullet I was stuck listening to at the campground! Last time it was some insufferable bass track bumping.

    Anyways, I love this camper!

    1. That’s a great idea! If you positioned them so that the “vestibules” were facing each other, didn’t drop down (or zipped off) the curtains you’d have a good 6 foot by six foot space to chill. We’d have the make provisions to allow ingress/egress from the side now but that would be possible.

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