Wabbit said:
Or buy a $2000 van, put $1000 into conversion? Then drive that for 5 years or whatever. Unless you have the cash, why take a gamble on something you might not really enjoy?
Good advice, this. Pay it heed. You can buy a nice, low-mileage B-van for less than $20k, ready to drive. You can save yourself a passel of money and a huge amount of time and trial-and-error learning by buying a used-B-van and using it for a couple of years to find out what you really DO and DON'T like, want, and need. THEN if you want to go buy a cargo van and do your custom thing, you'll actually have experience about what works and what doesn't for you. AND you can sell your B-Van for what you had in it... after using it for a couple of years!
highdesertranger said:
you never recoup your money with modifications. highdesertranger
Your van, with your custom mods, will likely be worth less than an identical un-modded cargo van on the resale market and will have a smaller market of buyers. A used factory-built B-van is much more in demand, and holds its value MUCH better.
MazdaGuy15 said:
We have looked at a lot of new and used class B's we don't like how big they are on the outside and how little room they have on the inside. They just have to much stuff that we don't want and are usually cheaply made.
I always enjoy listening to folks who have ideas and opinions about what they think they want, like, and don't like without having actually experienced doing what it is they want to do.
It's like folks who backpack or bicycle camp for the first time... they take all kinds of stuff that they think they need... and find out they don't, but should have taken all kinds of OTHER stuff. With backpacking or bicycle camping that's fairly easy to remedy. Unfortunately, with a van, that may mean having to RE-build your van's interior.
Class B-vans aren't any bigger on the outside than a standard cargo van, so I'm not sure what you're referring to there. And yes, they're small on the inside because they're built to have all of the comforts that most people find appealing. The only thing that factory-built B-vans tend to be short on is storage space, but we all seem to make do. Frankly I appreciate the amenities in my B-van. And Coachmen was considered the bottom of the class for quality interiors.
Consider, for a moment, that the primary issue you should be considering is "total cost of ownership" of a van. I bought my '95 Coachmen for $5k, and I've got another $5k or $6k in it in maintenance now, 20,000 miles later. I've still only spent a quarter of what you're anticipating after two years... and according to comps, my van is worth about $18k were I to sell it today. As close as I can figure, my van is costing me about $0.25/mile (total cost of ownership) with gas at $2.10/gallon. Figure out what your proposed Promaster might cost per mile to own including license, insurance, maintenance, depreciation, and interest on a loan, if any. "Total cost of ownership" is a really good way to compare the cost of owning various comparable vehicles.
So, perhaps those are some ways to look at what you want to do with a little different perspective.
Good luck with whatever course you pursue!