A new configuration for the XV-JP
This is one of those stories that starts out with an entirely different goal, but ends up with a good result. So here’s what happened.
I've added a Wilson cellphone amplifier, along with the necessary outside and two inside antennas and an antenna switch to control the Diamond motorized mount I needed to raise and lower the antenna so it needn't add any overall height. All of this left me with about forty feet of wiring to run through the truck and get organized.
Early on, it became clear that the wiring would be easier if I removed the slide-out upper bed. Unfortunately, the giant drawer slides don’t have simple tabs you can raise to pull out the moving part. But it wasn’t too hard to undo the eight socket head screws that held the bed to the glides, and I got the folding bed pieces out without a problem.
Once it was out, I was surprised at the amount of space I had in the nose, and that lead to the idea of reconfiguring the truck for just one traveler. Nothing that couldn’t be put back in place, as being able to sleep two is a big advantage to the truck. But if it was ever used for a serious expedition, it’d likely be by one traveler, so I was curious to see how it would work out.
If you take the upper bed out, that means you have to sleep on the lower bench, which is also the lower bed. By pulling the passenger seat forward, there’s enough room to flip up an extension to the bench; you then put a small foam pad (which also has a lot of other uses, like making your butt comfy when sitting on a hard picnic bench) on the extension and you have a bed that works for a six-plus-footer. But the width had been a problem, as the bench was only about two feet deep and it was right up against the passenger side wall.
It took big time guts to undo part of Paul’s work, but I cut the piece that trimmed the front of the cushion so it was removeable down to the level of the bench. It took a good long while (zebrawood is hard stuff) using my Fein Multimaster, but I eventually got it off. But I then had to devise a way to put it back on, as the bench was much more handsome with it. Some carefully drilled holes and some repurposed metal shelf supports
make it possible to pull the piece off and put it back on easily. When attached, you have to look carefully to see the piece is cut, and when it's off, it stores easily on an upper side shelf.
When the front trim piece is out, it’s possible to pull the cushion out toward the center aisle as much as you want. It turns out that about five inches is a good amount. That moves the sleeper away from the cabin wall and allows a 25 inch wide sleeping pad plenty of room. It’s a quite nice place to sleep.
O.K., that’s swell, but why bother when there was a perfectly good, and very comfy, bed up above? There are a handful of reasons. The big one is that you no longer need to raise the roof to use the cabin at night. This could be valuable if you wanted the added security, stopped late at night and didn't want to do anything except go to bed, or were facing some really gruesome weather. A minor advantage is that it’s easier to use the Porta-Potti and the sink during the night. And, because you’re already sleeping on a cushion, you can get by with a thin light duty pad (in my case, a Therma-Rest Prolite) that’s only about a quarter the volume to store of the big cushy pad used on the upper bed.
But what became cleared as I worked with the new configuration is that I was now awash in storage space. So I started in to make the space as useful as possible.
To begin with, I put down a piece of hardboard with a slippery side so that things could be moved around more easily.
Then I got myself two Rola organizers, one 15 x 38 and the other 15 x 25; these are nice because the dividers can be positioned anywhere or removed entirely, and they have convenient handles on the end to pull the out of the space. Clothes can go in some of the compartments, and I think I’ll save the 25 inch long organizer for dry food.
Having the new room on the driver’s side has given me additional space on the other side. It turned out, for example, that three 50 caliber plastic ammo cans fit in the very front area of the pssenger's side. And there's room for lots of other bags and compartments. Actually, I'm not close to optimizing the arrangement yet, but it looks like I'll have no worries. It looks like even the Pico folding chair can now go up in the nose.
All in all, the XV-JP continues to surprise me with its flexibility. It’s great that it can sleep two people, and I can get back to that configuration within ten minutes or so. And in that configuration, there was still plenty of storage space; it was already carrying everything I could think of needing. But this “sleep one” configuration offers a whole bunch more storage and might be the way to go on a long expedition. I’m going to leave it this way for the summer, I think.