The Green Mountain Wanderer – A DIY Composite F-450 Build

rickgibbs

Member
Love the design and write up!

You mention 1.6m frp….. did you mean 1.6mm thick frp?

Whoops. yeah, 1.6mm

Any idea on how much glue per square foot you used (per blue joint)? I am trying to guesstimate how much I would need to copy you.
For gluing up the panels, I think we went through 2 - 28oz tubes of PL per 4x8 panel. For mounting the panels to the frame, I think we ended up in the 30-40 10oz tubes of Sika 252 but I lost count along the way. I ended up with multiple orders to mcmaster along the way.

I may follow in your footsteps. I plan to skip the honeycomb part. I called my sales rep and he recommended 3mm skin in both sides, which would be around $5k plus shipping.
3m seems very thick to me and I believe others used thinner than me on their projects. 1.6m is very stiff and the panels are rock solid and I would imagine 3mm might be pretty hard to work with.

What prep did you do on the FRP gel coat to glue to your frame?

We lightly sanded with 80 grit, cleaned then used sika 207 primer on both the FRP and the exoskeleton. I learned of this method from the Everlanders and it seemed to work great.
 

rickgibbs

Member
The camper started to finally take shape (literally) after we installed the panels. Before installing each panel, we scuffed the gel coat on the FRP and primed it along with the aluminum with Sika 207. We used VHB to create a spacing for the glue (Sika 252) on each of the profiles then held the panels in place with butterfly rivets. The hardest part of the process was moving the panels around with just two of us, but we purchased some suction cup handles and they were a life saver.

We ended up using a laster to square everything up and make the proper cuts from the raw panels:

wall-1.jpeg
wall-2.jpeg

The hardest panel to install was the roof, but with some creative clamping and some raw muscle we were able to get it into place

wall-3.jpeg

wall-4.jpeg

Lots and lots of riveting but it was very satisfying work

wall-5.jpeg

wall-6.jpeg

We also pre-wired all the marker lights and ceiling lights via some u channel that we embedded in the roof panel

wall-7.jpeg

And of course my co-worker was there to test out the cabover

wall-8.jpeg

Tough to get a shot of the entire camper in the shop, but more pictures coming ...

wall-9.jpeg
 

Jonnyo

Observer
The camper started to finally take shape (literally) after we installed the panels. Before installing each panel, we scuffed the gel coat on the FRP and primed it along with the aluminum with Sika 207. We used VHB to create a spacing for the glue (Sika 252) on each of the profiles then held the panels in place with butterfly rivets. The hardest part of the process was moving the panels around with just two of us, but we purchased some suction cup handles and they were a life saver.

We ended up using a laster to square everything up and make the proper cuts from the raw panels:

View attachment 721963
View attachment 721964

The hardest panel to install was the roof, but with some creative clamping and some raw muscle we were able to get it into place

View attachment 721965

View attachment 721966

Lots and lots of riveting but it was very satisfying work

View attachment 721967

View attachment 721968

We also pre-wired all the marker lights and ceiling lights via some u channel that we embedded in the roof panel

View attachment 721969

And of course my co-worker was there to test out the cabover

View attachment 721970

Tough to get a shot of the entire camper in the shop, but more pictures coming ...

View attachment 721971

how much sika flex 207 primer did you need? also, what s the plan for joining the pannel inside?!
 

Ramdough

Adventurer
Whoops. yeah, 1.6mm


For gluing up the panels, I think we went through 2 - 28oz tubes of PL per 4x8 panel. For mounting the panels to the frame, I think we ended up in the 30-40 10oz tubes of Sika 252 but I lost count along the way. I ended up with multiple orders to mcmaster along the way.


3m seems very thick to me and I believe others used thinner than me on their projects. 1.6m is very stiff and the panels are rock solid and I would imagine 3mm might be pretty hard to work with.



We lightly sanded with 80 grit, cleaned then used sika 207 primer on both the FRP and the exoskeleton. I learned of this method from the Everlanders and it seemed to work great.

Is that one 28oz tube per side or 2 per side?

Thanks in advance!


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 

ben_j_c

Active member
Looks great @rickgibbs !

We used 5052 and 3/16" for the frame which in hindsight made a bomber structure, but I would probably do 1/8" next time around. The profiles ended up being angled and we had a 3" overlap wherever we were gluing

We went with 1/8" I think it was the right choice, very strong and kept it shape during construction, but not too heavy, time will tell though!

Once these rigs are all done we should plan a trip, I bet our girls would have fun together!
 

rickgibbs

Member
@rickgibbs any updates? At the pace you were going I assume you are about finished.

Sent from my Pixel 6 Pro using Tapatalk
Finished and went on a nice trip this summer. I got consumed with the build and let the posting die off. Over the holiday, my plan is to update the thread with the rest of the build and start posting again on the updates I am making.
 

ITTOG

Well-known member
Finished and went on a nice trip this summer. I got consumed with the build and let the posting die off. Over the holiday, my plan is to update the thread with the rest of the build and start posting again on the updates I am making.
Awesome. I just wanted to make sure we don't miss out on your progress. Thanks.
 

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