After successfully putting his NASA design skills to work on the Cricket Trailer, Garrett Finney has started on an even smaller field shelter. Similar in purpose to the Teal Tail Feather and other small campers, the new Firefly is designed to split the difference between gear hauler and camper. It can be mounted to a pickup truck bed, towed on a utility trailer or choppered in to remote locations.
Finney and his team at Taxa LP have come up with a small, lightweight camper pod that slides into the smallest pickup trucks on the market and fits in a 5 x 8-foot (1.5 x 2.4-m) utility trailer. Thanks to compact, lightweight aluminum construction (an aluminum shell insulated with aluminum-composite panels) the Firefly weighs in at 600 lb (272 kg), making it possible to tow it with vehicles as small as a Mini Clubman, according to Taxa.
"The patent application basically says, there's lots of luggage racks out there, and there's lots of gear racks, and there's lots of campers and little habitats, but this is really supposed to be right in between those," Finney told us.
Finney went on to describe the Firefly as a "toolbox that you can sleep in," and it is stripped to the bare essentials inside. The design is still being developed, but so far, we see a fold-down, two-person bed and numerous straps and attachment points for securing gear. A series of windows provide ventilation and light, and customers will be able to select from one- and two-door options.
That open, minimalist interior gives the Firefly plenty of room to haul gear. Finney said it can fit a dirt bike, possibly two. Of course, it can also fit various tools, boards, bikes, etc. The bed flips up against the sides, clearing out storage space during transit.
Just because the basic Firefly is simple doesn't mean that it has to lack other amenities. The customer will be able to fit-out the camper with choice of equipment, such as power and lighting systems. The ribbed exterior structure is designed for bolting, and it can be used to mount things that would usually be on the inside – things like a kitchen counter and water system. Finney also mentioned mounting tools and sports equipment to the exterior.
Beyond offering campers and adventurers a lightweight shelter and gear box, Finney imagines the Firefly being useful for all kinds of professional applications, including as temporary shelter for disaster relief. It includes a set of legs so that it can stand outside of a pickup bed or trailer.
"They are their own shipping crates, and they go places and provide a basic but very malleable, or adaptable usage, given that you can bring whatever you want attached to the outside of them," Finney explains. "So I like the idea of ecotourism, or that someone's getting married and they rent 12 of them and put them in a big circle with a campfire in the middle of them, or that they're part of a forest ranger outfit."
Taxa LP has built the first prototype and is currently fine-tuning the design and working on other ideas and accessories. One of those ideas is expanding the pictured sunshade into a full room extension that could serve as a weatherproof dining/living area. It hopes to bring the trailer to market by June with a price under US$9,000.
Source: Taxa Firefly
I agree. And you have to have a pickup truck and camp where it can go only. The idea of walking a few miles or more into wilderness, maybe high up into rocky crags, then sleeping in the open on the ground, or in a light hammock is a foreign one to most. Beginners should start with a tent, which can be rented at REI.
The appeal of campers is that you can take your house with you. But houses are only boxes of air. Still, unlike tents, or my preference, nothing at all, they have metal walls which are difficult for vicious critters, hockey mask wearers and zombies to penetrate.
I've been to the pictured Joshua Tree NP many times and walked in with just a light pack and water jug picked out of my car trunk at a trail head. Could include a mountain bike off a car rack but I'm too old for that and really prefer silent, easy walking at my own pace.
Not to knock what is likely a very clever design for those that want a large metal box they have to find a place to store, the handicap that comes with campers, boats, planes, and it's not a small one.
Little in the way of windows or provision for ventilation makes this a real sweat box that could only be used in the dead of winter - except with no ventilcation there is no way to use a space heater.
The sleeping platform is poorly designed with the center supports that block access to the area below. All that is needed are two side cleats and one can use 1" plywood to create a platform that supports two adults and leaves the bottom space completely open.
Looks like the guy is reinventing the wheel only making it square. Excellent illustration of how not to think inside or outside the box.
First of all, this is FREE-STANDING- it is a self-contained rugged structure that will survive harsh conditions.
A camper shell is just a pretty flimsy uninsulated cover for the truck bed that uses the truck for its foundation as well half its shape.
This can be shipped to (or left secure) as a complete unit on very remote sites.... alone.
It could even go on a pontoon boat,etc.
The thing is,what else can you find like it- at any price?
This is a good value compared with anything else new that is even remotely similar.
It's all a function of durability&quality.
I'd much rather get this than a typical "disposable" slide-in camper unit that just falls apart with time.
On a different note, with a name like Firefly I cannot help but wonder if they are Browncoats....