So what's the basic design criteria for the Graynomad Overland Vehicle (GOV ?
) and why build one at all when I already have a fantastic 6x6 overland vehicle?
A few years ago we spent three months living in (or rather beside) our 45-series Landcruiser (story
here if you're interested). For the first two months or so of that trip the weather was great and we wondered why we needed a motorhome at all. Then the weather turned to crap and we knew, there's no substitute for a hard-sided warm box when you get hit by a storm or freezing temperatures.
Still the freedom you get from having a small vehicle cannot be overestimated. You can just poke you nose down any fire trail with little thought about getting back out. The same cannot be said for a 14-tonne truck.
So as you may know on our return from that trip we pulled Wothehellizat Mk1 apart and rebuilt it as Mk2 which was a lot smaller. Mk2 is great but it's still too large to go to many of the places we know and those we don't for that matter.
Therefore a small Landcruiser-size vehicle with a house that can be lived in is what we want. We'll be keeping Wot Mk2, think of the Cruiser as a holiday home.
So the basic criteria are
Small
The house should be as small as possible while remaining practical. This is one reason a Landcruiser has been chosen as the host chassis, I think that's as small as you can go and still be comfortable for two people to live inside for long periods.
If possible the body should not protrude from the cab's lateral envelope (the what?), in other words it shouldn't be any wider than the cab. This means about 1700mm (67").
Overall hieght currently calculated at 2350mm (7'10") but that still depends on a lot of things.
Light
The body should be a light as possible. I always over-engineer things but this time I really hope to make a light-weight body. To this end it will be a monocoque design using composite panels (foam/fibre glass), the only steel will be in the sub frame and a few reinforcing points for spare wheel hanging etc. The sub frame should be light enough for me to lift, not that I have to lift it, that just seems like a good a design goal.
The Cruiser has a payload capacity of approx 1200kgs (2650lbs), the finished product including all fittings, water etc should be well under this limit. I have a target mass of 1000kgs (2200lbs) but that's just a wet-finger-in-the-air guesstimate.
Roomy
We do not plan to live "beside" the rig as is common with smaller 4x4s. The house must be comfortable enough for us to live inside regardless of the weather.
This isolates you from the crap on the ground and means you can camp anywhere you can find a few square feet of flat land while paying no attention to long grass, mud etc.
Being off the ground also keeps you away from many annoying insects, most notably sand flies.
Pop top
The primary pop top (or is it a tilt top) will be raised and lowered by 24" electric actuators. The secondary tilt top will be raised manually, it may or may not have gas struts.
A backup system has to be devised.
Solid sides
I do not like canvas, I know it's light but it is noisy and almost impossible to insulate. So the primary tilt top has solid sides. However the secondary tilt top (over the Luton peak) may have to have fabric sides, this is TBD.
Awnings
Of course these will be fabric. There is no obvious way to incorporate roll-out awnings into the body such that they are not exposed to trees etc, so I plan to add sail track on both sides and run tarps through that.
Charging sources
Solar and the vehicle's engine (via a DC/DC charger) will be the only sources of power. There will be no generator.
Depending on the inverter chosen it may be possible to charge from shore power as well but this is not a necessity as I can't see us being plugged in more than a few days a year.
Solar panels
We will be using the new semi-flexable panels, these are about 25% of the weight of standard glass panels. They will not however be glued to the roof despite this being a commonly-touted feature. This is a double whammy that stops heat dissipation from the panels (bad for them) and also looses you your tropical roof.
There will be provision for 1 or 2 remote panels that can be placed out in the sun.
At this point I'm looking at 720 watts on the roof and possibly another 480 watts remote.
Fuel
The only fuel required will be diesel, there will be no petrol or gas (propane) used. This is for a few reasons, space, convenience and cost. As the vehicle already has allowance for 180ltrs (47usg) of diesel it makes sense to use that to the best advantage. Any other fuel requirements mean the need for jerry cans, gas bottles etc, all of which take up room.
Propane can be difficult to get in the outback and even if it's available it can cost a fortune. Also all propane work has to be done by a tradesman and certified.
So I plan to add a third diesel tank, this of course takes up room as well but it is multi-purpose in that while the diesel in that tank is primarily for the cooker it can be siphoned into the vehicle tanks.
As for cooking on the diesel cooker, nowhere near as good as gas but then I don't do the cooking, I do make the coffee but I'll have an electric kettle for that
NOTE: Is induction worth looking at for cooking?
Water
It would be nice to have allowance for about 200lts (53usg). This should be achievable by building the tanks into the body. There will be 2 tanks, one for potable water and one for other water. It will be possible to transfer water from the "potable" to the "other" tanks.
The potable tank will in fact be two tanks with a balancing pipe, thus if one fails it can be isolated.
Pumps
Two 24v DC water pumps, nominally one for drinking water and another for fresh water. But valves to allow each to work on either tank as a redundancy measure.
External pump-in-a-box for filling from rivers etc.
Range
A range of about 2000km (1240 miles) is the goal. With the standard two fuel tanks and the third tank I install this should be achievable.
Why such a long distance? Are there no service stations in Australia? There are plenty of course, I suspect that a 400k (250 mile) range will get you between services stations just about anywhere except a couple of long desert crossings. But in the outback the fuel costs are extortionate. Much better to fuel up in a large town and not have to do so again until the next large town. That can easily be 1000k (620 miles) but if you do any off road work and/or make some detours you will use a lot more fuel.
Hense the 2000k range.
Heat
Assuming you are in the right place at the right season in Australia one would expect to encounter temperatures no higher than the low 40s centigrade and anywhere in 30s would be the norm. Heat is difficult to get away from, best not to bother trying and live with it, but there are things you can do in the design to help.
Ventilation — There are three important features for a living quarters, ventilation, ventilation and ventilation. You can can any two of these as long as one of them is ventilation. This means big shutters that open 100% and plenty of them, not the poky little windows common in European overland vehicles.
Tropical roof — A second skin to your roof with an air gap, the larger the gap the better but on a motorhome usually 25mm (1") is all you want to do to keep the height down. This tropical roof is easily obtained with no extra hardware by covering your vehicle with solar panels.
Fans — They use naff-all power and really help when there's no breeze. In general AC fans are better than DC and the larger the quieter. Small DC fans make a heck of a racket which is annoying during the day and impossible to live with at night when you are trying to sleep. That said I have an idea to used an array of computer fans with PWM speed control. More later.
Air conditioner
What for?
Cold
This vehicle is designed only for use in Australia, as such it should never see serious cold weather. While it is possible to have snow even in summer in some places the temps will seldom get below freezing, so all the stuff the guys in the northern hemisphere have to address (lagged pipes, heated grey water tanks etc) is not relevant to this design. That said it can get pretty darn cold in the desert at night (I have seen bowls of water freeze over when left outside) and we do plan to spend a lot of time in the high country (with the above possibility of snow) so the house has to be well insulated.
Heater
None as such, but I may have a clever idea to use the diesel cooker. Watch this space.
Windows
The back wall will have a Dometic double-glazed window with builtin fly screen and blind. In bad/cold weather this will be our window to the world.
All other openings are just that, openings with no glazing. Shutters provide protection from sun and rain and I'll make magneticly-attached screens to stop the bugs.
Electrical
The house electrical system is primarily a 24-volt system. 12 volts will also be available as will 240. At this point a 1000-watt inverter is planned, this will allow the use of small power tools such as a 4" grinder and our 800-watt kettle.
24 volts is chosen over 12 mostly because that allows me to run my DC MIG welder directly from the battery bank but also because it halves the wire sizes required.
Batteries
Lithium, specifically 8x 160Ah LiFe04 cells. People will argue about the numbers but these batteries have roughly 2-3 times the capacity of lead acid batteries for same Ah rating and they are much lighter.
So using a figure of 2.5x 160Ah of Lithium batteries is the same as 400Ah of lead acid batteries. The lithiums weigh 45kgs (100lbs) and the lead acids would weigh 120kgs (265lbs).
Lithiums are a bit harder to work with in a couple of ways but they have other features that makes them far superior to lead acid.
Electronics
I don't want this to get too complicated, but then I am an electronics engineer and a guy's gotta have some fun.
I have no interest in fancy sound/video systems or the like but do like monitoring and control networks to keep track of the solar etc. So I may design a serial network of intelligent nodes for this purpose. (Actually it's already designed really).
Apart from that all the usual battery, water, temp monitors.
Lighting
All LEDs of course. External work/security lights as well.
Mounting
At this stage I plan a 3-point (triangle) mounting using the same of resilient mounts I used on Wothehellizat, just a smaller verion.
Fitout
Aluminium Kubelok with 8mm Coreflute infill.
Appliances
- 15ltr Engel fridge, this will be set as a freezer.
- 30ltr Weaco drawer fridge.
- Eberspacher X100 diesel cooker.
- Electric blankets.
- 800-watt kettle.
If starting from scratch I would probably go eutectic for the fridges, but I already own the above.
Toilet
Porta potti, possibly a second cassette. Maybe a "composting" toilet? That needs some research.
Shower
None inside, sparrow wash or Whale pump with bucket outside.
Storage
Four toolboxes below sub frame level (actually part of the sub frame) and a single locker at the rear of the body for recovery gear, camp chairs etc.
Foot locker near entrance for shoes (assuming I buy some).
Hopefully heaps of internal storage.
Pressurising
Provision to apply a positive pressure to the house while driving to keep the dust out.
Beer
Provision for storage of 46 homebrew bottles and the drum.
Wheels
Standard steel split rims with pizza-cutter tyres.
Spares
All appropriate belts and hoses. Spring and shocky bushes. Power steering, engine and diff oils, enough to do an oil change in the field. Two complete spare wheels/tyres and a couple of tubes.
Suspension
Probably leave standard springs but add BOSS airbags on rear. Jury still out on that.
Tools
A good selection of tools, tyre levers etc. Electric rattle gun. Also 24V DC MIG welder.
Recovery gear
All the usual I guess, including
- Electric winch.
- Tirfor (because I already have one).
- Snatch, extension, tree protector etc etc straps.
- Ground anchor (Army spikes, DIY rack).
- Front and rear e-lockers.
- Maxtrax (or aluminium sand ladders).
- High-lift jack.
Other
- Powder fire extinguishers,
- Reusable water fire extinguisher.
- First aid kit.
- Iridium satellite phone.
- Spot or InReach tracker gadget.
So that's a rough outline of the plan and all I can think of right now. I don't know if I can really afford things like the lockers so probably better to buy them first while still in a building frenzy, if I leave them till last I'll be gun shy of spending.
Most of the above is still negotiable so please speak up if you have any ideas.
I might be able to pinch some idea's
Feel free
I hesitate to use the term "open source" as Jay Shapiro did but I will be posting full plans (in Sketchup) and of course trying to document things as well as is practical.