redman4556
Adventurer
Ubolts and a oak strip is all it takes. Unless you need isolation from frame twist, ubolts will hold the box in place.
Thank you!!
Ubolts and a oak strip is all it takes. Unless you need isolation from frame twist, ubolts will hold the box in place.
Yeah, I don't know of any 10' long ,6.5'-7' wide with a cabover. I think your best bet is the 10' cutaway van box similar to the pic you posted.I can't tell you how much I appreciate the find, but I'm a picky mother******. It's a 12' box and I'm looking exclusively for one between 9' 6" and 10' 10" long.
Your pickup frame and that box truck frame are probably different. Usually commercial truck frames kick up right behind the cab and have flat frame rails all the way back. This makes the upfitters job easy. Pickup frames are usually a little different. You will probably have to make some type of mounting system that attaches to your frame that mimics the commercial truck frame that the box will then attach too.
You'll need to make sure the rails on the vehicle and the cargo body aline, same width, for the ubolts to attach.
If your reuseing the ubolts, the oak or rubber isolation rub strips might be resused as well.
Sorry I haven't read all the posts in this tread.
There is a whole industry devoted to the manufacturing, maintenance and repair of cargo bodies. IMO, Morgan is the best.
Two things I would look for if your going to turn this into a living space. Stay away from a transparent fiberglass roof. While they do let light it, their fragile. Don't know if they can be reskined in aluminum.
The floors are typically planked in 5/4 red oak. The floor is the foundation on which the walls are built on. Look closely at the rear corners and the sides for rot.
The front radius corners and edges can be replaced. Their damaged all the time.
I prefer FRP panels over aluminum, aluminum dents to easily.
Your pickup frame and that box truck frame are probably different. Usually commercial truck frames kick up right behind the cab and have flat frame rails all the way back. This makes the upfitters job easy. Pickup frames are usually a little different. You will probably have to make some type of mounting system that attaches to your frame that mimics the commercial truck frame that the box will then attach too.
We are not talking about material thickness, it's the width between the frame rails. My '92 F350's frame rails are 37" wide, outside to outside. The '97 C&C is only 34".
Ah, I didn't think material or frame rail size had much to do with it. Thanks for confirming. I'll have to give the guys with the boxes a call and find out exactly how far apart the box's frame rails are.