Home » This Giant 30-Foot And 9,000-Pound Truck Camper Has A Porch, A Garage, And Comes With One Of America’s Greatest Diesel Pickup Trucks

This Giant 30-Foot And 9,000-Pound Truck Camper Has A Porch, A Garage, And Comes With One Of America’s Greatest Diesel Pickup Trucks

Bigfella Camper Top

The truck slide-in camper is a versatile way to go RVing with your pickup truck while being able to tow your boat and have hard walls to sleep under. But many of these campers are compact units that you might not want to live in. That was the case with the 12-foot Lance owned by Tom. When he found the camper too small, he decided to expand it to more than double its size. Now, it’s a 30-foot-long behemoth with a slide, a garage, and a porch that’s longer than the Ford F-550 Super Duty dually that’s hauling it. Even cooler is the fact that you can buy it.

This story comes to us from the RVing with Andrew Steele YouTube channel. As Andrew explains, for the past seven years, he’s been searching America for the most unique RVs, and the one that brought in the most traffic was this truck camper. He spotted it four years ago, and the post he made about it got over seven million views. People wanted to know how it was built, who built it, and why.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

Andrew has finally tracked down the owner, Tom, and as it turns out, this truck camper is not entirely custom-built. It started off as a mass-market truck camper that was smaller than half its current size. Then, Tom’s needs changed, so did the shape of the camper. Now, this Internet-famous rig is for sale, and its asking price is refreshingly reasonable. The icing on the cake is that the truck underneath comes with one of the most legendary diesel pickup truck engines of all time, the 7.3-liter Power Stroke V8.

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Screenshot: RVing with Andrew Steele/YouTube

When 12 Feet Isn’t Enough

As the story goes, in 2003, Tom bought the 2001 Ford F-550 Super Duty Power Stroke from a retired Northwest Airlines pilot. At the time, the red dually had a 12-foot Lance truck camper sitting in its bed. The pilot bought the camper and truck new to travel with his wife, but, sadly, she was diagnosed with cancer and passed.

Tom has owned the truck and its attached camper ever since then. At first, Tom used the truck and the camper as a vacation vehicle, taking his partner and his family on fun camping trips. Sadly, in 2015, Tom’s partner would be diagnosed with Pancreatic Cancer and would later pass. Tom would then start spending more time in the camper, embracing the RV life, and driving it down from Minnesota to Florida, to where his mother had moved. Tragically, she would pass, too.

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A Lance 1121 likely similar to what Tom’s looked like when new. Credit: Trailer World of Colorado

As Tom further embraced the RV life, he decided to spend the entire winter in Florida. But this presented a problem. A 12-foot camper is a small space to spend six months out of the year in. Tom would spend the next six and a half years transforming the Lance into what you see today.

When you look at the side of the truck, you can see the remnants of the Lance. The area featuring the slide, the awning, and the storage compartments all originated with the Lance. The white part of the cabover portion of the camper is what remained of the Lance’s cabover area. Tom said that the original cabover area was an annoyance because once he got into the queen bed, there were only a few inches between him and the ceiling.

So, Tom, who was an engineer by trade, cut open the Lance. Then he built a wooden frame that raised the roof and extended the cabover portion to an area ahead of the truck’s hood. Tom said that he gave the front of the camper its tapered shape to help it cut through wind like a modern semi-tractor or Class C motorhome.

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Screenshot: RVing with Andrew Steele/YouTube

The rear end of the camper, which is a sort of attic, porch, and garage in one, is also made out of wood and diamond plate. It looks like he stores bicycles, fishing poles, ladders, and beach chairs in the garage.

Tom says that the walls are three inches thick with foam insulation inside and diamond plate steel on the outside. It’s held together with glue, screws, and neoprene washers. Tom describes it as “bulletproof,” “hailproof,” and “leakproof.” I wonder about that “leakproof” part, because I see lots of seams where water can get in, and a wood build can still rot. But Tom doesn’t elaborate any further.

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Screenshot: RVing with Andrew Steele/YouTube

This may also be an optical illusion, but it also looks like the cabover portion of the camper is at a different angle than the rest of it, with the rear portion sloping towards the ground. Still, it looks like a better build than many of the campers cranked out of Indiana. Tom also says that his dream build was something even bigger that rode on the back of a Ford F-750 and had a garage for motorcycles or other toys.

As for this camper, Tom says it weighs around 17,000 pounds total. It’s not clear if that number includes the truck or not.

Correction: I thought I saw F-350 badges when viewing the video, but, thanks to a reader, I have since noticed that the truck is actually a Ford F-550. Based on Ford’s documentation, this truck should be within gross weight limits. I regret the error.

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Screenshot: RVing with Andrew Steele/YouTube

The reason the truck looks normal with all of that weight is because Tom is hiding the weight with an aftermarket air suspension.

If you don’t buy the truck with the camper,  you’ll need a Ford F-550 or higher to carry this camper. That’s assuming the camper weighs around 9,000 pounds, anyway.

Power comes from Ford/Navistar’s iconic 7.3-liter Power Stroke V8, which put out 250 horsepower and 505 lb-ft when this automatic transmission-equipped truck was new. Today, the truck is said to have 265,000 miles, no rust, and averages 7.4 mpg. Tom says he really doesn’t want to sell the truck with the camper, but he’ll sell the truck if you give him $20,000 for it.

The interior is completely different from any 2001 Lance. Tom says that when he added on his extensions, he gutted and then renovated the interior. The only original Lance part remaining is the camper’s electrical box, hatches, kitchen vent fan, and other miscellaneous items.

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Screenshot: RVing with Andrew Steele/YouTube

The inside opens up with some storage areas, and then a fascinating dining room. By day, there’s just a bench, which more or less functions as the camper’s living room. If you want to eat, a table flips up, and then you have to install two portable benches.

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Screenshot: RVing with Andrew Steele/YouTube

The kitchen was all custom-built by Tom, and was designed to fit a big guy. He also added a bunch of storage areas, including one specifically for trash bags. Otherwise, you get the standard complement of a stove, microwave, refrigerator, and sink. Most of the camper’s components also route through the kitchen area, including the water tank, water heater, and 400 watt solar system. but this makes sense, as that’s where most of that equipment would have been in the original Lance.

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Screenshot: RVing with Andrew Steele/YouTube

The dry bathroom is a nice little part of the rig, and features a flushing toilet on a pedestal and a shower large enough for a six-foot-tall person to clean up in. It’s noted that the toilet, sink, and shower are also original from the Lance.

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Screenshot: RVing with Andrew Steele/YouTube

The grand finale is the bedroom. The entrance to the bedroom features two massive closets. This is where the original queen bed used to be. Further forward is the new king bed, which features a wood vaulted ceiling over it.

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Screenshot: RVing with Andrew Steele/YouTube

Tom says he’s selling because he’s getting older and it’s time to let it go. He hopes the buyer will be someone who wants to continue the camper’s journey. Tom also thinks the prospective buyer better be an extrovert who loves attention, because they will get it no matter where they go. If none of those details have turned you off, Tom, who can be found around Bradenton, Florida, wants $20,000 for the camper, or $40,000 for the truck and the camper. Click here to reveal his phone number. This number will be deleted when the rig is sold.

Not The Craziest Price I’ve Seen

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Screenshot: RVing with Andrew Steele/YouTube

Tom says he prefers to sell the camper because the truck is in really nice shape, and he’d rather not have to deal with the new truck market. But money talks.

I love so much of what Tom did here. I am a huge fan of custom camper builds, and it’s clear that Tom built something that he truly enjoys. This is a camper he built to cook stir fry in while jamming to Lynyrd Skynyrd on some beach in Florida. This whole camper is a vibe, and I’m here for it.

Good on Tom for having a dream and seeing it through to reality. This beast might just be the craziest camper that’s technically still a Lance.

Top photo: RVing with Andrew Steele/YouTube

 

 

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Lewis26
Lewis26
8 minutes ago

The poop emoji seat covers caught me off guard lol

Hazdazos
Hazdazos
16 minutes ago

Hotel rooms are like $100/night and come with AC, clean towels and toilet paper.

Max Headbolts
Member
Max Headbolts
13 minutes ago
Reply to  Hazdazos

And you don’t have to look for a tank of diesel to dump your poo every few days.

Phil
Phil
17 minutes ago

I can hear that truck groan from here.

It also looks like a bit of a nightmare to drive. Top heavy, massive overhangs, the cacophony of the 7.3 clattering away under load as it makes NVH and power in roughly equal portions.

But I’ll hand it to this guy for really throwing himself at a project. It’s kooky and interesting.

IRegretNothing, Esq, DVM, BBQ
Member
IRegretNothing, Esq, DVM, BBQ
17 minutes ago

Going by the badges this is an F-550 and not an F-350, which makes the build a little less dangerous. But it still looks pretty fucking dangerous. I sure as hell wouldn’t recommend driving it anywhere.

Greg
Member
Greg
26 minutes ago

I’d rather be waterboarded than even see this in person let alone own it.

This style camper is my most hated by far, and they turned it up to 11. I can’t imagine the amount of thought, time and money that went into this. People can do what they want with their time and money obviously, but I am hopeful that someone rich buys it just to destroy it. I’d throw some money towards that if anyone local wants to do a go fund me.

UnseenCat
UnseenCat
28 minutes ago

I really do appreciate the builder’s dedication and ingenuity. I’m simultaneously baffled and impressed by how it manages to be highly practical and highly impractical at the same time. And awestruck by the total and cavalier disregard for weight limits, yet clearly there was some back-of-the napkin calculation going on to distribute and support that weight, particularly in the front bracing and counterbalancing storage/wight box.

This is what happens when Florida Man gets an engineering degree.

Hazdazos
Hazdazos
14 minutes ago
Reply to  UnseenCat

This is when Florida Man thinks he’s better than those “stupid engineers who just told me it couldn’t be done”.

UnseenCat
UnseenCat
3 minutes ago
Reply to  Hazdazos

“I’m an engineer. Trust me!

Phil
Phil
13 minutes ago
Reply to  UnseenCat

He majored in Florida Man and minored in engineering.

Arrest-me Red
Member
Arrest-me Red
29 minutes ago

I saw the video on this unit. Interesting but it is so specifically built for the user, not sure I would want it.

I would hit my head on that porch every single time.

If this is your thing, do it.

Pat Rich
Pat Rich
37 minutes ago

K…but why not just buy a class c?

AustinAmbassadorYreg
Member
AustinAmbassadorYreg
11 minutes ago

I think the logical thing with that truck would be a 5th wheel.

OCS-BN
Member
OCS-BN
54 minutes ago

Close that fu#$ing lid!

PhilaWagon
PhilaWagon
57 minutes ago

Truck: $20k
Camper: $20k
Flagrant disregard for safety: Priceless!

Rob Stercraw
Rob Stercraw
1 hour ago

Those seatcovers totally match the likely driving experience. I can think of a lot better use of $40K. I can hear the truck speaking to me and its saying https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-3_IuPMya6k

Alexk98
Member
Alexk98
1 hour ago

I’m sorry but this thing is 5500 pounds overweight at best. Air suspension or not this thing is an absolute danger to the roads. 20k for a 25 year old, 265k mile truck with a hacked apart camper with an incredibly dubiously rearward center of gravity is just insane. Being that far over GVWR is well outside of any safety margin built into the trucks brakes, suspension, and drivetrain. It’s impressively done, but I think this falls squarely into the “only asked if they could, not if they should” territory.

StillNotATony
Member
StillNotATony
1 hour ago
Reply to  Alexk98

Ahem…

It’s $20k for the hacked apart camper. It’s ANOTHER $20k if you want the 256k truck under it.

“Tom, who can be found around Bradenton, Florida, wants $20,000 for the camper, or $40,000 for the truck and the camper.”

As the other site would say, 100% crack pipe.

Alexk98
Member
Alexk98
37 minutes ago
Reply to  StillNotATony

OH I completely missed that detail that’s even more insane. 20k for the death trap of a camper that’s probably riddled with hidden mold is a hell of a tough sell. Peak boomer “I know what I have no low ballers” mentality right up there with automatic C5 convertibles with the crappy C1 body kits that people think are worth 50k.

Rad Barchetta
Member
Rad Barchetta
1 hour ago

Amazing build! I only have one question. Why not aluminum instead of steel?

Hazdazos
Hazdazos
12 minutes ago
Reply to  Rad Barchetta

Because steel is what he had laying around in the backyard from his recent junk haul.

IRegretNothing, Esq, DVM, BBQ
Member
IRegretNothing, Esq, DVM, BBQ
11 minutes ago
Reply to  Rad Barchetta

He probably has more experience working with steel. I wonder how much weight he could have shaved off with aluminum though. Probably not enough to make this thing safe, but every little bit helps.

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