Getting the right vehicle

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MarioT'sCJResto

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I started out with a Camry, and while I knew my limitations I enjoyed years of camping up in the mountains of Northern AZ to Idaho. I actually miss the old days of tossing the tent and camp chairs in the trunk and the cooler in the back seat. With the gas prices of today I was actually leaning towards picking up a hybrid AWD Camry or Avalon and scraping the plans to build an Overland X rig. So I guess I'm telling you to just go out there and have fun, take your time and see what best fits your needs.
 
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zgfiredude

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Soooo much more info needed from you to even attempt to answer that question!

1. Daily Driver or no?
2. Where do you live?
3. Only vehicle in the household?
4. Other needs....towing, hauling, passenger capacity?
5. Preferred fuel type...gas, diesel, electric, nuclear?
And on and on....
 

Babirdi

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Soooo much more info needed from you to even attempt to answer that question!

1. Daily Driver or no?
2. Where do you live?
3. Only vehicle in the household?
4. Other needs....towing, hauling, passenger capacity?
5. Preferred fuel type...gas, diesel, electric, nuclear?
And on and on....
I want it to be my daily driver also.
I live in Minnesota, so not many terrain i can think of.
It won't be the only vehicle in the household.
Not sure if I will tow anything at the moment.
And I think I would prefer gas not sure about diesel.

Hopefully that helps narrowing it down.

Thank you.
 

Babirdi

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I started out with a Camry, and while I knew my limitations I enjoyed years of camping up in the mountains of Northern AZ to Idaho. I actually miss the old days of tossing the tent and camp chairs in the trunk and the cooler in the back seat. With the gas prices of today I was actually leaning towards picking up a hybrid AWD Camry or Avalon and scraping the plans to build an Overland X rig. So I guess I'm telling you to just go out there and have fun, take your time and see what best fits your needs.
Thank you, but if I may ask, were you ever hesitant about just going out there and doing it?
 

Billiebob

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The one you already own is a great place to start.

Buy a tent, sleeping bags, cooler and go.
Time will tell you if you need bigger smaller more fuel efficient or capable of carrying more stuff.

Your question is way to open to expect relevant advice.
Where, when, with whom are you travelling/overlanding.

PS, just buy a Wrangler and be done.
 

Babirdi

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The one you already own is a great place to start.

Buy a tent, sleeping bags, cooler and go.
Time will tell you if you need bigger smaller more fuel efficient or capable of carrying more stuff.

Your question is way to open to expect relevant advice.
Where, when, with whom are you travelling/overlanding.

PS, just buy a Wrangler and be done.
I've always wanted to travel across country and be prepared for anything I come across. Who knows maybe ship the car overseas and overland there for couple of months.
 

MarioT'sCJResto

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Thank you, but if I may ask, were you ever hesitant about just going out there and doing it?
Not at all, I remember going to Walmart, picking up my camping gear and heading north to Flagstaff. I had it all; a Colman Tent, Bag of Kingsford Charcoal for the fire, one of those Styrofoam Coolers, a camp light, flashlight, and a camp chair. Now a few years later I would end up adopting my first pup, which then became 3 pups and there was no looking back.

This pic is from 07 with my pups on a weekend getaway just outside of Mesa AZ

10398824_12854782451_1315_n.jpg
 

Babirdi

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Thank you, but if I may ask, were you ever hesitant about just going out there and doing it?
Not at all, I remember going to Walmart, picking up my camping gear and heading north to Flagstaff. I had it all; a Colman Tent, Bag of Kingsford Charcoal for the fire, one of those Styrofoam Coolers, a camp light, flashlight, and a caImp chair. Now a few years later I would end up adopting my first pup, which then became 3 pups and there was no looking back.

This pic is from 07 with my pups on a weekend getaway just outside of Mesa AZ

View attachment 231505
Thank you so much, will definitely go to my local walmart and start soon.
 
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Thank you so much, will definitely go to my local walmart and start soon.
[/QUOTE]
Don't go too overboard with gear either. Start from the basics ( a place to sleep, a place to cook, a place to sit, water) and get out a few times. Build up on what you think you need from there. I have a ton of equipment that stays in my garage all the time because I thought it was a good idea when I bought it. Fora few years I slept in my vehicle, but it was tight, cold, and moisture builds up inside. Then for years I slept in a hammock, but sometimes tou want a little more privacy for changing, and a dry place to stand or sit in the rain. I'm getting back into a small ground tent with a sleeping pad and inflatable pillow.

All that said, when I pack to go solo, or meet up with friends, my whole sleep setup fits into a backpack, then I carry spare parts, tools, air system, and my cooler. They gets packed into my TJ along with about 10 gallons of gas.
received_453566918741934.jpeg
If I'm headed out with my wife and kid things get packs a little different, and we take my compass, with a trailer full of gear.20220523_111843.jpg
It's all situational. Where we go, what we bring, what vehicle we drive..... sorry for the long post lol
 

MMc

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What is the proper rig is like asking what is the best girlfriend, depends on you.
I started riding in the back of VW bug with my parents. Going to national parks and Baja. I progressed through plenty of and cars and trucks. Everything is a trade off, like girlfriends. Shop Facebook for camping gear, get a waterproof tent not a house tent. Borrow gear from your friends you'll figure out what works for you, you don't need new to start. You may not like this way of life, maybe you'll find a guy who fully rigged himself out and decided it wasn't for him,
 
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PCO6

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... I have a ton of equipment that stays in my garage all the time because I thought it was a good idea when I bought it.
Same here. We need to organize a flea market. Years ago a bunch of us with extra British car parts in our garages did just that. It was 1978 and, notwithstanding COVID, it's been held every year since!
 

Babirdi

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Thank you so much, will definitely go to my local walmart and start soon.
Don't go too overboard with gear either. Start from the basics ( a place to sleep, a place to cook, a place to sit, water) and get out a few times. Build up on what you think you need from there. I have a ton of equipment that stays in my garage all the time because I thought it was a good idea when I bought it. Fora few years I slept in my vehicle, but it was tight, cold, and moisture builds up inside. Then for years I slept in a hammock, but sometimes tou want a little more privacy for changing, and a dry place to stand or sit in the rain. I'm getting back into a small ground tent with a sleeping pad and inflatable pillow.

All that said, when I pack to go solo, or meet up with friends, my whole sleep setup fits into a backpack, then I carry spare parts, tools, air system, and my cooler. They gets packed into my TJ along with about 10 gallons of gas.
View attachment 231506
If I'm headed out with my wife and kid things get packs a little different, and we take my compass, with a trailer full of gear.View attachment 231507
It's all situational. Where we go, what we bring, what vehicle we drive..... sorry for the long post lol[/QUOTE]


No need to apologize, the post was well justified and also needed 10/10.
Thank you.
 
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Babirdi

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What is the proper rig is like asking what is the best girlfriend, depends on you.
I started riding in the back of VW bug with my parents. going to national parks and Baja. I progress through plenty of and cars and trucks. Everything is a trade off, like girlfriends. Shop Facebook for camping gear, get a water proof tent not a house tent. Borrow gear from your friends you'll figure out what works for you, you don't need new to start. You may not like this way of life, maybe you'll find a guy who fully rigged himself out and decided it wasn't for him,
Well said, thank you.
 

Sparksalot

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$5,000 and lower
That’s going to be tough, but not impossible. I picked up one of my tahoes at auction for $4400. It was an ex K-9 unit, so missing a lot of interior pieces, but that works well if you’re looking at a seat delete and other modifications to go overlanding anyway.
 

MOAK

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Hmmm, $5000 or lower. The very first vehicle that comes to my mind would be a Toyota RAV4 first generation. Dependable and open to slight modifications both interior and exterior. Lift it an inch or two for larger AT tires, baseline the mechanical stuff, fold the rear seats down, throw some gear in and go.
 
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