I had a canvas RTT and have since upgraded to a fibreglass hard-shell RTT from James Baroud, which was much more expensive.
However I sometimes miss the canvas one because it was bigger and I liked that it enclosed the ladder, going up the ladder while not getting rained on.
The hard shell is much tougher, quicker to setup and put away (internal gas struts are big help) and is genuinely waterproof, especially after packing up in the rain. We had it out in some very strong winds in places like Hobart and the car was rocking around and ground tents were getting smashed while we were fine. I doubt the canvas RTT would have handled the very strong gusts which we experienced.
However the hard-shell is overall smaller inside and the opening is not covered when climbing the ladder.
Packing up a wet RTT or many of the canvas camper trailers is no fun in the wet and they are not all waterproof, i.e. the wet canvas can make bedding wet when stowed.
What I found on a recent 2 month trip to Tassie was that canvas was not ideal, either on a RTT or camper trailer. The conditions can go bad quickly and they are not good for escaping the conditions when needed. This is where a small enclosed camper like an A-van, a caravan or a camper-van would provide that shelter without getting soaked setting much up. We met a number of famlilies in camper trailers who were paying for hotels because of the hassle in setting up every night in bad conditions (with kids too)
It all depends on the type of travel and the weather conditions.
I reckon a RTT is ideal (for 2) when you are changing camp every night. The usual canvas type is fine for warm dry weather conditions and its nice to have the breeze blowing through on hot nights. Trips like Cape York are ideal for RTT's. Piece of mind away from crocs and other critters.
Both the old canvas and the current James Baroud fit great on my No.5 trailer too!
If you are set on a canvas RTT I recommend ones where the ladder is covered when you climb up.




). So pack up every day, go for drive, and set up every afternoon/night. If your going somewhere and you don't want to drive around, or if others will offer a seat, then its not a problem at all.
				
				
				
					
  Reply With Quote
Bookmarks