Well I was trying to sell the box today, went to the International truck dealer and he offered me $500 for it, they would take it off and remove the lettering (all the lettering is just stick on). He said it is 'worth' $1500 off the truck and the lettering removed. I bought some "Goof Off" and am going to try to get the letters off.
Went to the Isuzu dealer and he said they would sell it on consignment for me, he figured I could get $1500 for it as is, and they would try to sell it for $2000 and get the $500 for commission. But they didn't want to buy it outright. They want $388 to remove it from the truck, which is figured at 6 hours of labor, which seems high. Maybe I can work out a deal to do most of the work, and they just cut the lift gate from the frame and lift it off. I also asked about an auxiliary fuel tank, they want $1065 just for the tank and brackets, not including any hoses or pump, plus $355 for labor. Looks like I will be going a different route for that!
It is $190.50 for a new wheel, the truck doesn't have a spare. I also got some prices for filters: Air - $43 for Japan Isuzu, $29 for China Isuzu; Oil - $24.50; Fuel - $13.24. I haven't looked any other place, are they available for less at NAPA or other auto parts stores?
Will probably try to sell the box on Craigslist and see what happens for a week or so.
I found some nice looking stuff for the siding of the bike garage today at Lowes, 4x8 sheets of textured FRP, waterproof, .09" thick for $32.50. They also had what looked like the same thing, but it was called NRP, which was only $24 a sheet. Of course there wasn't anyone there that new what the difference is. According to this website
http://www.cranecomposites.com/PDFs/6909_corp_tech.pdf the NRP is not fiberglass reinforced, where FRP is, and FRP if supposed to be vastly superior. Has anyone used either of these?
I was thinking of putting 5mm Luan plywood on the outside of the camper and then the FRP on the outside of that.
I plan on taking out the pink fiberglass batting insulation and putting in R-Matte Plus 3 sheathing. In 3/4" thickness ($14 for a 4x8 sheet) it has a R-5 rating instead of the blue Styrofoam brand ($12) which has R-4 rating. The R-Matte also has a water resistant membrane on both the inside and the outside, which is a sandwich of aluminum and plastic.
Ahh, I can see the signs pointing to a large over budget factor already!
Vic