Cladding, Wiring & Insulation
Next we could start cladding with aluminum checker plate to suit and had the holes for our windows lazer cut into the panels:
Whilst working we got the order in for the custom aluminum windows. We do not suffer from extreme cold in Southern Africa so double glazing was not a priority for us. But we did have some flyscreens installed in the windows (flyscreens not shown here). The bathroom window we had made with frosted glass for what it is worth.
Notice the cab slider to replace the existing solid back window of the Fuso. We also had a sliding window installed on the camper to correspond with this one. Not exactly a pass-through but at least we could communicate with the kids seatbelted in the camper. We can do this in South Africa, no engineering report required :Wow1:
At the same time we put up the strip of aluminum extrusion to hold our awning. This one has two wire rope feeds. One for the awning itself and another below for the back wall of the add-a-room.
Howling Moon makes a great ready-to-go pull out awning with a wall set; all made from ripstop material. The back wall is not included in the wall set but can be ordered additionally. And it comes at the fraction of the price of a dedicated motorhome awning.
Finally it was time for the monumentous task of wiring. This requires some planning on where you are going to put what i.e. lights & switches, electrical sockets for appliances, charging stations etc.
We had an ally beam structure to work from so it was easy enough (just time consuming) to drill holes through the beams and route our wiring to each planned point in the camper. The wiring could not run underneath the beams as this surface was required for fixing the ceiling to. Rubber gromets or sikaflex must be used inside each hole to prevent wiring from chafing through against the metal surface.
Gas pipes plus Hot & Cold water hoses were routed at the same time:
It is kind of important to have a map of your wiring, or mark each wire with a number, as tracking them afterwards would be a nighmare! And use rubber grommits around cables where they route through holes in a metal frame or they will shave through.
Installing the insulation was pretty straight forward. We used 25mm thick ISO Board commonly used in household ceilings. It cuts really easy, is light weight and has great insulation properties. The trickiest part was cutting channels into the board to route wires and this took a bit of patience: