Hey there!<br>Bigger than my E350 14' 7.3 ltr Diesel engine box truck, that is a nice ride. Mine is a tab bit older though.<br><br>You can see some of the things I did to mine in the Truck section.<br>Build it how you want to, enjoy it, revamp it and remember, your getting only slightly less fuel mileage than some of the high tops and better fuel mileage than almost all the RVs out there! <br><br>Point though. As nice as that ceiling is for you, you will find issues very fast with it! Heat/cold and condensation. Mine only has one clear panel on top and it is grrrreat for lighting but sucketh for everything else. I used the Durofoam/PlasticFab stuff on my walls and ceiling with PL9000 glue. The one panel that is clear, I covered half, the half that is over the kitchen area, I left open.<br><br>Origninally I had modified one of the windshield covers using velcro to cover that panel. During the summer it dropped it from 145 deg far down to 105 doing that alone. In the winter though, it started to rain inside from the condensation from that panel. Now I put up a panel of Coroplast translucent but still used the velcro. Velco lets in too much air and moisture, so as soon as it gets warmer, down it will come, scrape off the velcro, mount the Coroplast directly to the frame and cover the Translucent panel. Next I will put up the windshield cover again, it is great as I can just roll it back to where I want it to go and allow the amount of sunlight coming in that I want in. With the Coroplast in place, this way the air pocket will act like insulation, the shiny sided windshield cover will reflect the hot Sun rays out and I am much cooler during the daytime. <br><br>Come warmer spring time (I live near Toronto Ontario) since it is still cold here, I am remodelling big time. Use the space better, fix the rolling door up semi permanently and put in a wall with window and walk in door in the rear open area. That little space above the cab is useless and a problem. Moisture gets in there, and it rains in that area as well right now. Gutting it, using the flexible reflectix to insulate and cover up in there, rip out the soggy wood, and hopefully it will solve some of my issues. Wait and see on that one though.