Happy to oblige - Overlanders and Rig Pics are like grandparents with their grandbabies. Photos are always handy
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Here he is - the mighty Pachyderm, or "Pac" for short (fits the theme of the screen name!). The bumper is off a chevy colorado since they don't make one for the Canyon, and the "Racing stripes" on the hood are actually 3M Grip Tape - the sticky sandpaper used on ladder steps and such - which allows the dogs to hop on the hood and gain access into the RTT.
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As mentioned, the Cap is home-made using aluminum composite cladding. This is a common material used in signs and in making buildings. I needed 2 sheets for my project and each sheet would have cost me about $100 CDN, but I was able to find some from a construction company who gifted me free panels that were in their scrap bin that I just cut to size so my actual cost was a bottle of whisky. It comes already coloured so you have lots of colour options.
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Here it is all deployed - it opens up all around and is built as a "live around" rig, so we wanted good access from all around the vehicle.
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A closer look of the inside from the back. The wooden drawer unit was designed to give us sealed storage (two drawers - one for camp items, the other for personal items like clothing). The open area on the left is the fridge slide - if i were to do it again the only thing i'd change is build a "roof" on the fridge area to reclaim some storage space. I was nervous about venting and wasn't 100% sure on my fridge size when I built it, so I left it open, but I'd enclose the top the next time and do venting differently.
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I mentioned the dust ingress in a cap - this was my solution. It's a bathroom drain that I painted black - one of those "push to close/push to open" style drains. When open, air is forced into the cap area and that creates a positive pressure situation under the cap. That positive pressure prevents dust ingress from all the other cracks and pinholes which otherwise would serve to suck dirt in via a venturi effect.
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And as an extra layer, I put a weed eater air filter on the other end to catch any dust that sneaks through the drain. This works exceptionally well for dust, but since moving to a humid coastal environment, I've learned that it doesn't provide enough day-to-day airflow to prevent mold in the constant-rain winters we have here so I plan to equip a 12v fan there to enhance the air flow and re-assess next year. It's not a big deal - I occasionally have to go wipe stuff down with vinegar in a spray bottle.
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Rough shot of the electrical system, housed behind the fridge slide. I've got a Renogy DC-to-DC charger so the deep cycle charges while we drive, which is routed through the fuse box. Fuse box runs all electrical including the switch panel - the switch panel controls the interior lights, the water pump, the inverter, and has 4 USB plugs with voltage monitors built in. Fuse panel also has I think 4 dedicated circuits that I ran to the cab - I use one for my video camera rear mirror (a must when using a cap, I think), and I have a few spares for charge points and in case I wanted to install other accessories.
In terms of “by the numbers”, our truck has a 1550 lbs payload, and the occupants are me, my infant son, my wife, 2 German Shepherds, sometimes a cat. We are usually running between 5800 and 6100 lbs with a GVM of 6000 - we are over when we had both dogs and the BBQ. We’ve since said goodbye to one dog (she was nearly 15) and our son has less stuff as he ages, and the bbq is optional so it’s easy to be under our GVM but we don’t mind being slightly over for short weekend jaunts. For longer runs or more technical terrain I’d like to be a few hundred lbs lighter, and I think I could achieve that via a deck and canopy system over what I have now, but at 10-15 times the price.
Happy to answer any and all questions!