I wouldn't buy a conventionally constructed camper with wood frame or covered plywood sheets. Thermal transfer, condensation, resealing every year... your camper is going to rot. Maybe if you live somewhere dry and only use it in fair weather.
I wanted to get a composite panel camper for 4-season performance and light weight, Total Composites or Cascadia Composites. But all the hipster van-lifers seem to be driving that market and the prices and times have gone crazy. Buying a composite shell only and building out your own isn't cheap either and then you need the time. The Scout campers are a little cheaper and more available in the composite market, but still require resealing every year due to differing expansion and thermal transfer in the aluminum extrusions they use to connect the panels.
So I just ordered a new Northern Lite 610.
There's not much real world info on these yet because the model just launched, but NL has a great reputation and their campers last. This 610 is sold as a 4 season camper under 1500#, 1/2 ton truck capable, with the same build as their large campers, just smaller and more basic. Heater, hot water, solar, cassette toilet, outside shower are standard. I crawled through one and I think it's great, but I don't need much. Anyone that remembers the old NL 610, this new 610 shell is larger.
The bigger NL units (8-11 for shortbox) are very spacious and comfortable, that's what my wife would rather I get, and there are a lot of used ones available... I have a diesel F350 and 4000# payload and could fit it, but I don't want the weight and size of an 8-11 on some of roads we end up on. Maybe in a few years and for a different purpose and with a dually...
Plus with no overhang on the back no extension is needed for towing a trailer for the quads or the boat. My truck is a 6'9" shortbox and the tail gate will close with the camper loaded. Integrated tie downs on this model, no additional tie down system required.
*not my truck but this will be the setup
