SeniorMasterSergeant
Member
- Joined
- Jan 22, 2022
- Messages
- 7
- Reaction score
- 9
Hello,
I am Jesse, from western Washington. I retired from the US Air Force in 2007, after 25 years of service.
My platform is a 1997 Grumman Olson step van, atop a Chevrolet P32 forward control chassis. The van is a 12 foot step van, which means it has a cargo area 12 feet long.
I run my bicycle service shop from inside this van. It was originally owned by the City of Tacoma Power Utility, as a maintenance van. I didn’t have much to modify to use it for bicycle service. I’ll get some interior pics up here if anyone is interested. But, in the next two years, I’ll be rebuilding the interior space, so I can easily remove the bike shop equipment and transform it into a traveler I can use with my family of four (and two dogs) to trek across the country to the east coast to see a total solar eclipse in 2024.
Before that trip, I want to do a couple test runs with it, probably to RTR in Quartzsite, since that happens in January. January is the slowest month for my bike service shop, and a good time to see Arizona.
The vehicle is quite sound. When I bought it four years ago, it had 32,000 original miles on it. It appears to have spent much of its life waiting to be driven. The engine is a Detroit Diesel 6.5 liter, normally aspirated V-8, turning a 4L80E transmission. The engine is a little bit special, as it’s an unusual configuration. Most 6.5L diesel engines were equipped with turbochargers and an electronic fuel injector pump. The engine in my van is the HO (high output, whatever that means) version, RPO code L57. That means, I have no turbocharger, no EGR, and a mechanical fuel injector pump. Grumman Olson really ordered chassis and built these bodies to be long life, simple, and reliable. I really hit a jackpot when I found this van, I think.
Behind the louvered box visible in the photo is a 5kW generator set (which was already installed when I bought the van). It’s more power than I need, and is somewhat loud. But, as I intend to only operate it for cooking operations, I think I’ll live with it until it needs to be replaced.
It has no air conditioning, which will limit where and when I travel, until I can solve that problem.
For cabin heating, I intend to install a Wabasto oil fired heater. They will run happily on diesel fuel, but if I have the space, I am going to install a separate heating oil tank for the heater, so I don’t have to burn up fuel for which I paid road tax.
I also need to install a solar power system for house lighting and other low current applications, to leave the vehicle starting batteries with nothing to do except start the engine.
I’ve been working in this van year around for four years now. A couple areas I know need addressing are sound and thermal insulation. The walls and ceiling are insulated from the factory, but I don’t think that’s very effective stuff, and probably shrunk since the van was new. I don’t think there is any insulation on the floor. I know that the fender wells are single wall bare aluminum, and there is exposed aluminum just about everywhere in the cab!
I’m glad to have found your forum, and hope I can contribute.
Jesse
SMSgt, USAF (ret)
I am Jesse, from western Washington. I retired from the US Air Force in 2007, after 25 years of service.
My platform is a 1997 Grumman Olson step van, atop a Chevrolet P32 forward control chassis. The van is a 12 foot step van, which means it has a cargo area 12 feet long.
I run my bicycle service shop from inside this van. It was originally owned by the City of Tacoma Power Utility, as a maintenance van. I didn’t have much to modify to use it for bicycle service. I’ll get some interior pics up here if anyone is interested. But, in the next two years, I’ll be rebuilding the interior space, so I can easily remove the bike shop equipment and transform it into a traveler I can use with my family of four (and two dogs) to trek across the country to the east coast to see a total solar eclipse in 2024.
Before that trip, I want to do a couple test runs with it, probably to RTR in Quartzsite, since that happens in January. January is the slowest month for my bike service shop, and a good time to see Arizona.
The vehicle is quite sound. When I bought it four years ago, it had 32,000 original miles on it. It appears to have spent much of its life waiting to be driven. The engine is a Detroit Diesel 6.5 liter, normally aspirated V-8, turning a 4L80E transmission. The engine is a little bit special, as it’s an unusual configuration. Most 6.5L diesel engines were equipped with turbochargers and an electronic fuel injector pump. The engine in my van is the HO (high output, whatever that means) version, RPO code L57. That means, I have no turbocharger, no EGR, and a mechanical fuel injector pump. Grumman Olson really ordered chassis and built these bodies to be long life, simple, and reliable. I really hit a jackpot when I found this van, I think.
Behind the louvered box visible in the photo is a 5kW generator set (which was already installed when I bought the van). It’s more power than I need, and is somewhat loud. But, as I intend to only operate it for cooking operations, I think I’ll live with it until it needs to be replaced.
It has no air conditioning, which will limit where and when I travel, until I can solve that problem.
For cabin heating, I intend to install a Wabasto oil fired heater. They will run happily on diesel fuel, but if I have the space, I am going to install a separate heating oil tank for the heater, so I don’t have to burn up fuel for which I paid road tax.
I also need to install a solar power system for house lighting and other low current applications, to leave the vehicle starting batteries with nothing to do except start the engine.
I’ve been working in this van year around for four years now. A couple areas I know need addressing are sound and thermal insulation. The walls and ceiling are insulated from the factory, but I don’t think that’s very effective stuff, and probably shrunk since the van was new. I don’t think there is any insulation on the floor. I know that the fender wells are single wall bare aluminum, and there is exposed aluminum just about everywhere in the cab!
I’m glad to have found your forum, and hope I can contribute.
Jesse
SMSgt, USAF (ret)