PaulJensen
Custom Builder
(above) Jeannine bought her Sprinter new in 2006...It is used mostly for transporting pallets of fruit and is a place to sleep while on the road...The Phase 1 conversion plan is in her hands...
(above) Zero improvements have been made to the interior since it was new...
(above) It's pretty clean inside...
(above) Working on a one-owner vehicle is nice...They seem to care more about them that something that has changed hands a few times...
(above) Insulating the interior is a priority...
(above) Today, the insulation starts in the doors...The panels are removed and the interior of the door is washed out well and dried...I'm going to use contact cement to fasten the insulation to the steel...Glue doesn't stick to dust, so the clean and dry formula is important...
(above) The headliner came out too, then the metal ceiling was washed and dried...
(above) In the shop three kinds of deadeners and insulation are on the table...The silver foam on the roll is about 1/4" thick and very flexible...The grey foam is from Harbor Freight and is about 3/8" thick and mostly used as a garage floor padding, but I like it on flat steel because it really deadens road noise effectively...The generic roll fiberglass is a great thermal insulator...
(above) What I use to stick thing together...
(above) Spray shop inside the side door...Everything gets a thin sprayed on coat, then pressed in place immediately...The contact cement dries really fast which is great since dry time isn't much of a factor in getting things done...
(above) Multiple layers are as simple as cut, spray, put in place and repeat...
(above) The window prevents building the silver foam up too much...
(above) The driver side door...
(above) The headliner area got at least three layers of foam...
(above) Then the headliner panel was reinstalled...