Just looking at your last picture, are you using that rubber hose for your diesel heater (with the clear filter)? As far as I know using this type of hose would end up crusting up your heater in no time...
2 years later but where is Randys Truck Shop ???Just wait till you replace the cheap 12v cooler for a Dometic CRX-50 or bigger. I’ve run most of the “long weekend” on a pair of golf cart 6V batteries... with it in full freezer mode. Randy’s Truck shop has them for about $500 usd. I’ve posted before what their promo code is that will save 10%... NEW10 I believe.
The Dometic units are rated to draw 6 amps running and about 1.1 amps/hour over a 24 hour period vs 5 amps/hour for the cooler mine replaced.
Thank you for this, me too I've considered keeping the original everything the best choice, and repurposing stuff. Glad to hear that might not be the best idea. My logic was save the time and work on what is missing. But maybe starting from a blank sheet is best and get rid of the excess baggage.I thought it would be easier to work with my existing electrical system, disable & remove what I don't need and then wire in my new circuits. (lights, heater, water pump, etc). About 60 hours later I'm fairly sure I made the wrong decision. It all works and I've got my switches where I want them but it's takes up way more space than it needs to
Thank you for this, me too I've considered keeping the original everything the best choice, and repurposing stuff. Glad to hear that might not be the best idea. My logic was save the time and work on what is missing. But maybe starting from a blank sheet is best and get rid of the excess baggage.
I really like the raised roof and new interior too.
Google figured it out… It should have been Raney’s. Auto correct likely changed it like it just tried to.Thanks! The roof raise is a total game changer.
Connecting into the original panel was fine when the electrical system was mostly stock and before I gutted the interior. However that strategy of conserving parts and trying to keep things as close to stock as possible really fell apart once I wanted to make better use of the space and had to start relocating components. Better to design and build to your requirements vs adapting.
I think one could reuse a lot of the original pieces. For example the power distribution bar, breakers and connectors are all really great quality and I don't think it makes sense to throw them away. But I could be wrong. The time spent in reusing those vs buying new, purpose built components might be false economy.
Good luck!
PS No idea who Randy's Truck Shop is. That's a comment from @Bikersmurf I ended up going with an AC bar fridge. $135ish on sale and runs great on the original inverter.
I’ll be following along to see how the 4x conversion goes.
i checked out the expo site… no prices. Do you mind if I ask the ballpark cost on his kit?
I’ll keep it in mind if I decide I need another 4x. $2k doesn’t seem unreasonable for what you get. I’ve heard someone local paid $6k for a solid front axle swap in a smaller 4x4… and that’s just one axle and the front suspension.Kit was roughly $2K USD. Cost a couple hundred bucks to get shipped to Alberta.
If you can source an entire donor for a good price then this is certainly the least expensive 4x4 conversion for people that aren't into fabricating their own brackets, etc.
Not counting rims & rubber I expect to be under $5K for everything.