I'm fairly close (we'll see) to closing on a deal for a new 400. The issue I'm wondering about is taking delivery of a brand new trailer in the dead of winter (february).
Our current popup trailer was purchased new but the underside of it looked like it was 10 years old. The reason being was that it was towed to the dealership (Indiana to Idaho) in December and road salt had its way with the underside. Granted the frame itself was ok but the leaf springs (I realize there are no leaf spring on the 400) and hardware took a beating with rust coating all of them. I'd like to try and avoid this as much as possible.
Are T@Bs trucked in or pulled in to dealerships typically? I saw a video on YT where they were actually delivered in the back of a semi (covered). The dealer is a good 1400 miles away from the factory so it'll be traveling a good distance. I know this may sound petty but I'd really hate to have a brand new trailer looking like a rust bucket underneath. Not to mention there are genuine concerns about corrosion. I know the underside is covered with that corrugated plastic but is that more of an invitation for hidden corrosion or does it actually block the elements from intruding further under the frame?
2021 400 BD
2020 Tacoma TRD Off-Road
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If I had it to do again I would insist on no towing in the salt.
2020 Tacoma TRD Off-Road
Best bet is to simply contact the dealer and ask how the trailers are shipped to them.
2015 Subaru Outback 3.6r (unsafe 200lb tongue weight limit until 2020 models)
2020 Subaru Outback XT
Pacific NW
I wouldn't even worry that your 400 would be trailed any other way than on a semi truck load for a 1400+ mile journey to your dealer . It is WAY more cost effective to ship multiple units on a single load , than individually by a pick-up truck , and they know that .
On a very rare occasion , usually for closer shipping , they may use 1up, 1 back towing , where a large truck has the ability to put one "unit" above the truck on a rack , and tow another "unit" behind . Have seen this in the boat business but its only for closer trucking shipments, or smaller dealers . Usually not for very long cross country distances .
I think its a safe bet that your 400 will be on top of a semi trailer specially built to haul smaller trailers .
Good luck with the new T@B !
2024 NuCamp T@B 400 BD, Grey / White
2016 Ford Transit 350 XLT - Adventure / Travel Van / 320s interior !
2019 NuCamp T@B 320s Grey / Black - SOLD
The dealer is smaller which is what has me concerned. I put in an email to Nucamp to see what they say.
2020 Tacoma TRD Off-Road
2021 T@B Boondock CS-S
2018 Nissan Pathfinder
Ontario, Canada
Almost all bigger RV's get towed one at a time to dealers, so I am assuming a fair share get towed in salt too. At least with smaller trailers I think it is more common to load several on a trailer, BUT I know not all do because I know mine got towed from NuCamp I'm February and did get salted.
NuCamp has limited storage as do most dealers and when it is ready it gets moved because everyone has a schedule and typically that is not planned around weather.
Brian
2020 Toyota 4Runner
Yeah there still may be road salt but not to the extent of pulling one 1400 miles across the country.
2020 Tacoma TRD Off-Road
cheers
2018 Ford F150
2021 T@B 320S Boondock “The T@B”
Towed by a white 2019 Ford F-150 4x4 Supercab, 3.5L V6 Ecoboost “The Truck”
2021 T@B Boondock CS-S
2018 Nissan Pathfinder
Ontario, Canada
After towing our Tab one winter, I found surface rust on all the underneath metal.
I used Gemplers 'Rust Converter' on it, which worked well. It's the consistency of water and goes on easily. It turns a dark gray/black.
They recommend a top coat of a more durable paint, but I found it lasted a few years even without paint.
2014 S Maxx
2011 Tacoma 4cyl ... edit: 2022 Tacoma 6cyl - oh yeah!
A_Little_T@b'll_Do_Ya