mexicanfooddude
New member
Hey everyone, been lurking around here for a long time gleaning inspiration and information from all of you guys for my own build. Been meaning to put a thread together for it for a while now, and finally getting around to it.
First off, just want to say a huge thanks to sarconcepts (Bullet XV), Carlyle (Alaskan Camper), a few of the cool cats from pirate4x4, like MT4Runner and IDASHO, and many more of you whose builds I’ve found particularly inspiring and helpful. Mine is nowhere near as gnarly as theirs and most others on here… but it’s a fun project.
I was looking for a surf expedition vehicle that could comfortable house the lady, myself, our black lab, and plenty of surfboards/fishing gear/etc for long period trips (6 months was our first trip planned). Some other criteria: able to be slept in some urban-ish areas without raising too much suspicion, able to convert to run on WVO, some off-road capability.
I first considered custom builds of either a sprinter or ford van, and a prefabbed RV. Sprinters and ford vans somewhat satisfied the under the radar criteria (although pretty common in the surf world), but didn’t really have enough storage/living space for a long trip, although we could have made it work. Prefabbed RV fails miserably in the under the radar and off-road categories. Plus, I’m a DIY kinda guy, and I wanted something custom…
Enter a 1994 E-350 17’ UHaul. 7.3 IDI, N/A, E40D auto trans, 185,000 miles. 60,000 as moving truck, 60,000 as a company truck for Merrill Lynch, and 60,000 as a transporter for custom-built dune buggies. Dune buggy company knew their way around engines, and took pretty good care of this thing…
With the goal of under-the-radar in mind, I kept the street side clear of windows and doors, and have left the roll up door on (thus far). So it just looks like a parked moving truck when driving by. I bought some surplus RV windows and a door and put em on the curb side, and installed some fold-out steps underneath. Put two RV-type roof vents through the aluminum roof skin. Here’s what else I’ve done…
• Custom cabinets: kitchen counter, closets, bed extension from cab-over (sits on closets, extends from cab-over 30” to fit a queen bed), base for a futon, and bathroom
• Installed two-burner cooktop + 10# propane tank
• Installed Engel 12V fridge/freezer
• Installed 40 gallon water tank (mounted under truck) + pump, plumbed to kitchen sink and exterior shower.
• 2x 6-volt Costco golf cart batteries, charged by 100 watt solar and (rarely) PD4045 converter/charger.
• LED strip lighting on dimmers installed on wooden “L” brackets down length of box cast indirect lighting on ceiling.
• Built a compost toilet with urine diverter; no blackwater tank required.
• Put rigid foam insulation between roof supports and used ¼” plywood for ceiling – no other part of vehicle insulated (yet)
• Lend-a-hand door handle, occupancy-sensor controlled LED porch light.
We completed this in time to do a 3-month trip through the western US and Canada last summer. Trip only 3-mos instead of 6 because we found out we had a daughter on the way and wanted to be back home for the birth, not in the middle of BFN Here are some build and trip photos:
So far I’m pretty happy with it, I still want to do a lot to improve the aesthetics of the vehicle though, inside and out, and improve the ride and durability. It’s a tough balance of keeping it under the radar, but also wanting to make it look ************. Any suggestions/input is highly appreciated!!!
Here’s what’s on the cards for phase 2:
• Remove faring below the box floor (along sides of box) and replace with underbed boxes. I’m thinking I’ll have these built from galvanized sheet metal, as they won’t carry a ton of weight and I really can’t afford some crazy stainless steel boxes from Northern Tool. Any other suggestions?
• Bus flooring/insulation on top of aluminum floor (best heat sink ever, it’ll suck every ounce of heat out of the box within 5 minutes of the sun going down) – ½” rigid foam + ½” plywood + cork or wood laminate. The cabinets are all already in of course, so I’m trying to figure out if I should go through the royal PITA of removing cabinets and doing this to the whole floor, or leave the cabinets in place and just do this to the exposed areas. Leaning towards the latter…
• Rigid foam insulation + plywood paneling on walls. Same issue as above, do it around cabinets on exposed areas, or pull all the cabinets out?
• Replace the “living room” roof vent/fan with a fantastic fan
• Remove poorly-insulated and drafty roll-up door, build out plywood rear wall with horse-trailer style swing-out doors.
• Install WVO dual-tank system (hoping to add second tank in between frame rails near diesel tank, haven’t looked that closely down there yet). Going to do a FPHE + final stage electric heater. We’re warm weather people… freezing surf doesn’t get me too excited.
• Do a better job with the ceiling panels.
• Install a new kitchen countertop. I used ¾”x8” maple lumber, glued together laterally, to build a 30” x 80” counter… well, apparently I wasn’t sealing it frequently enough with mineral oil, because after only a year it has split lengthwise in several places. A carpenter friend of mine said my theory was sound in principal, but I’m trying to weigh trying it again over just buying a laminate countertop.
• Install a water heater. Think I might do solar hot water panels + 6 gallon tank.
• Install a shower in the bathroom. This will require some fiberglass work in the bathroom.
• Rear cargo rack mounted to bumper + spare tire.
• LED flood lights on each side and rear, + back up camera.
I’d also really like to make this thing do better offroad. I don’t want to do anything crazy, but being able to handle some dirt roads in Baja would be nice. My strong suit is not suspension though, so is it even logistically/economically feasible to improve this?
Thanks for checking it out. As mentioned, ANY input/suggestions/constructive criticisms much appreciated. I really wish I had started this thread when I started the project… probably would have saved a lot of time and done a much better job. Better late than never though. I’ll be detailing future work/progress here.
First off, just want to say a huge thanks to sarconcepts (Bullet XV), Carlyle (Alaskan Camper), a few of the cool cats from pirate4x4, like MT4Runner and IDASHO, and many more of you whose builds I’ve found particularly inspiring and helpful. Mine is nowhere near as gnarly as theirs and most others on here… but it’s a fun project.
I was looking for a surf expedition vehicle that could comfortable house the lady, myself, our black lab, and plenty of surfboards/fishing gear/etc for long period trips (6 months was our first trip planned). Some other criteria: able to be slept in some urban-ish areas without raising too much suspicion, able to convert to run on WVO, some off-road capability.
I first considered custom builds of either a sprinter or ford van, and a prefabbed RV. Sprinters and ford vans somewhat satisfied the under the radar criteria (although pretty common in the surf world), but didn’t really have enough storage/living space for a long trip, although we could have made it work. Prefabbed RV fails miserably in the under the radar and off-road categories. Plus, I’m a DIY kinda guy, and I wanted something custom…
Enter a 1994 E-350 17’ UHaul. 7.3 IDI, N/A, E40D auto trans, 185,000 miles. 60,000 as moving truck, 60,000 as a company truck for Merrill Lynch, and 60,000 as a transporter for custom-built dune buggies. Dune buggy company knew their way around engines, and took pretty good care of this thing…
With the goal of under-the-radar in mind, I kept the street side clear of windows and doors, and have left the roll up door on (thus far). So it just looks like a parked moving truck when driving by. I bought some surplus RV windows and a door and put em on the curb side, and installed some fold-out steps underneath. Put two RV-type roof vents through the aluminum roof skin. Here’s what else I’ve done…
• Custom cabinets: kitchen counter, closets, bed extension from cab-over (sits on closets, extends from cab-over 30” to fit a queen bed), base for a futon, and bathroom
• Installed two-burner cooktop + 10# propane tank
• Installed Engel 12V fridge/freezer
• Installed 40 gallon water tank (mounted under truck) + pump, plumbed to kitchen sink and exterior shower.
• 2x 6-volt Costco golf cart batteries, charged by 100 watt solar and (rarely) PD4045 converter/charger.
• LED strip lighting on dimmers installed on wooden “L” brackets down length of box cast indirect lighting on ceiling.
• Built a compost toilet with urine diverter; no blackwater tank required.
• Put rigid foam insulation between roof supports and used ¼” plywood for ceiling – no other part of vehicle insulated (yet)
• Lend-a-hand door handle, occupancy-sensor controlled LED porch light.
We completed this in time to do a 3-month trip through the western US and Canada last summer. Trip only 3-mos instead of 6 because we found out we had a daughter on the way and wanted to be back home for the birth, not in the middle of BFN Here are some build and trip photos:
So far I’m pretty happy with it, I still want to do a lot to improve the aesthetics of the vehicle though, inside and out, and improve the ride and durability. It’s a tough balance of keeping it under the radar, but also wanting to make it look ************. Any suggestions/input is highly appreciated!!!
Here’s what’s on the cards for phase 2:
• Remove faring below the box floor (along sides of box) and replace with underbed boxes. I’m thinking I’ll have these built from galvanized sheet metal, as they won’t carry a ton of weight and I really can’t afford some crazy stainless steel boxes from Northern Tool. Any other suggestions?
• Bus flooring/insulation on top of aluminum floor (best heat sink ever, it’ll suck every ounce of heat out of the box within 5 minutes of the sun going down) – ½” rigid foam + ½” plywood + cork or wood laminate. The cabinets are all already in of course, so I’m trying to figure out if I should go through the royal PITA of removing cabinets and doing this to the whole floor, or leave the cabinets in place and just do this to the exposed areas. Leaning towards the latter…
• Rigid foam insulation + plywood paneling on walls. Same issue as above, do it around cabinets on exposed areas, or pull all the cabinets out?
• Replace the “living room” roof vent/fan with a fantastic fan
• Remove poorly-insulated and drafty roll-up door, build out plywood rear wall with horse-trailer style swing-out doors.
• Install WVO dual-tank system (hoping to add second tank in between frame rails near diesel tank, haven’t looked that closely down there yet). Going to do a FPHE + final stage electric heater. We’re warm weather people… freezing surf doesn’t get me too excited.
• Do a better job with the ceiling panels.
• Install a new kitchen countertop. I used ¾”x8” maple lumber, glued together laterally, to build a 30” x 80” counter… well, apparently I wasn’t sealing it frequently enough with mineral oil, because after only a year it has split lengthwise in several places. A carpenter friend of mine said my theory was sound in principal, but I’m trying to weigh trying it again over just buying a laminate countertop.
• Install a water heater. Think I might do solar hot water panels + 6 gallon tank.
• Install a shower in the bathroom. This will require some fiberglass work in the bathroom.
• Rear cargo rack mounted to bumper + spare tire.
• LED flood lights on each side and rear, + back up camera.
I’d also really like to make this thing do better offroad. I don’t want to do anything crazy, but being able to handle some dirt roads in Baja would be nice. My strong suit is not suspension though, so is it even logistically/economically feasible to improve this?
Thanks for checking it out. As mentioned, ANY input/suggestions/constructive criticisms much appreciated. I really wish I had started this thread when I started the project… probably would have saved a lot of time and done a much better job. Better late than never though. I’ll be detailing future work/progress here.