It's been a very long time since my last update on the campervan, but I've continued to work on it and things started to come together quite quickly towards the end, if there ever is an end to converting a van, which I doubt.
I don't suppose this project will ever be completely finished, there'll always be things to repair, modify or add, but most of what was originally intended has now been done, along with several examples of 'scope creep' in the form of stuff I just kept adding to the workload as I went along.
We've already been away on two separate week-long trips in the van, and after each we made a few modifications to the vehicle, just to make life easier and more convenient.
So this post is by way of being a Van Tour. Twenty weeks since I bought the van, the post shows what it looks like now.
on a campsite at Aldbrough in Yorkshire ... |
The roll-out awning above the side door came from the courtyard of a restaurant in York. Fitting it to the van was a major project in itself. I first mounted a pair of unistrut channels to the body at the roof roll, using high-tensile bolts and picking up the strong points of the internal roof stiffening. I designed, fabricated and welded steel brackets to fit the awning to the unistruts.
awning as bought, filthy & neglected ... |
The awning cover material needs replacing, it's stained and punctured in a few places and it's also bright orange (!) so we'll buy a new one - they're widely available in more subtle tones, and it's a simple replacement but not a high priority at the minute.
at Floors Castle, Kelso ... |
The frilly end valance of the awning has gone, replaced by a cut-down length of uPVC square-section guttering which nicely hides the visible side of the awning cover when retracted. I also bought a couple more long lengths of these gutters, and intend to use them to make a cassette to fully enclose the retracted awning, but again that's a project for the future.
Onto the van tour, opening the back doors reveals stowages and services :-
rear of toilet room, stowage of ladder & hoses to the right |
water tanks & services to the left, central shelves with fridge on the top |
The fridge is a very recent addition, replacing the electric coolbox we'd first installed. The coolbox was OK but ran constantly and never became really cold inside, whereas a 'proper' compressor fridge only runs intermittently and can actually freeze items in the icebox, so great for keeping ice cream bars etc inside.
Although the total energy consumed is about the same for both types (~300 Whr per day), the leisure batteries were never completely fully-charged because the coolbox was running constantly. You might wonder why this is important, or even desirable, but it's so the charge controller occasionally has a chance to divert any excess solar energy to the vehicle start batteries, to keep them topped up too.
Here's the fridge location from the inside :-
The chemical toilet is prevented from moving around by the upstands fitted on the duckboard. This room is not yet finished and needs painting (or tiling or waterproof panelling ?). I've already bought some tanking membrane paint to waterpoof the room for when (if) we fit a shower, but the walls are bare for now. There's a sliding door for the room but it's difficult to photograph - it's kept locked in the open position whenever the vehicle is moving.
The eagle-eyed among you can see the 1,000W inverter display (lower right) is showing 6A current draw from the batteries, because the fridge compressor was running at the time. The solar controller is simply matching the fridge demand with energy from the panels, which indicates the batteries are fully charged - if they weren't, the controller would be pulling much more power from the solar panels on what was a very bright day.
The open space where that plastic box is now was originally built for the electric coolbox. Another reason for swapping it for a fridge is that the coolbox was top-opening, and therefore needed to be pulled out into the open every time we needed access.
The strongbox is fitted with a Mauer safe lock, and the door is hingeless & flush mounted making it impossible to insert a pry bar to try and lever it off. More on van security later ...
during trial assembly of the stator ... |
In the travelling position, the seat is secured by four M10 handwheel screws that lock the rotor plate to the stator. When parked up, these screws can be removed and the seat turned around, and one of the screws used to lock it into its inboard position.
brackets as supplied, suitable for rear barn doors |
shackleless padlock - 73 mm diameter |
The brackets as supplied fitted the rear barn doors on the van OK, but they're not suitable for the side sliding door without major modifications.
new brackets made for the side door |
The circumference and rear face of each padlock were wrapped with self-adhesive neoprene strips. These make the locks a snug fit in the brackets and prevent them from rattling around if they're fitted when the vehicle is moving.
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