Thanks. I'm liking the way it all went together.bullfrog said:Nice looking rig and awning! Welcome.
The wide perspective lens on my cell phone makes it look like it's up. It's actually level, but I designed it to have a gap at the van so wind can blow through instead of blowing it off. It overlaps the roof of the van, but there's about an 8 inch gap.wayne49 said:The slant up away from the van lets hot air escape.
Welcome to NM. There's a lot to see here.MrNoodly said:I've been in NM the past couple of months. Right now I'm camped in El Malpais (wow, a cell signal) and headed to Bisti/De-Na-Zin tomorrow to hike among the hoodoos.
Axel said:Welcome to NM. There's a lot to see here.
It's a fairly simple build. Started as a 15 passenger van and I took all the seats out and left the interior panels and headliner in. On the roof there's a 150 watt solar panel, attachments for my DIY canvas awning, a 10 ft x 6 inch diameter PVC tube to store the awning and poles, and two 6 inch diameter vent fans in the far back corners (no opening windows in the rear of the van). Mounted to the floor just ahead of the left wheel well is a 110 amp AGM for a couple LED dimmable lights, power for the roof vent fans, power for charging devices and a radio, and a 300 watt sine wave inverter. Everything is run through a 20 amp Morningstar inverter except the inverter. For a bed I cut the arms off of a wooden Futon frame, bolted it so it can't fold, and added 6 inches to the legs to create storage underneath. The mattress is just a futon mattress with a memory foam pad. In the next two weeks I plan to add a solid fuel sailboat heater, assuming all the parts arrive on time. Other than the tent, cots, and sleeping bags my car camping gear transferred nicely to the van.eDJ_ said:Congratulations on your build. That will make a fine example for others here who would like to see a real example
of a first build.
I have to laugh when I look at the phot0. I'm reminded of my Dad always carrying rolled up pieces of tar paper
and carpet. Once the awning was set up (dining fly he used) we would roll out the tar paper and then the carpet over it so the sitting/dining area would meet with his standards. He claimed it could get muddy and nasty if it rained otherwise.
And I agree about tilting the awning down if it rains cause the outer edge can become like a bag of water. At 8 lbs a gallon it won't take but a few gallons of collected water before the whole thing collapses on your stuff. And you may want to have your side doors closed before it would rain, cause the awning will sag enough to make closing them difficult.
I'd like to see interior photos, but from what I'm seeing of the outside I think you did a fine job. :thumbsup:
Regardless, I hope you have a good time. The fall colors are fabulous right now in the northern part of the state (well, anywhere where there's aspens in our many mountain ranges). There's a lot to see. I've only been here 13 years and have only scratched the surface. NM really grows on you - the more you learn the more you want to experience.MrNoodly said:Thank you, but this isn't my first time here. I have friends near Taos, ABQ and Silver City. I've covered most of the western half the the state, plus some of the east, like Carlsbad, Roswell, Clovis and Tucumcari. I like New Mexico.
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