Ive had quite a few request interior shots of our camper.
We are prepping for our next trip currently, and the camper received a deep clean.
Figured it was as good a time as ever for some photos.
Besides the two back cushions that the wife (finally) finished, hey, wats a 10-year delay
the interior has essentially been used and unaltered since built.
It was done on the cheap and with every ounce of concern (weight)
And has performed and is has endured.
Cabinets were built using a 3/4x3/4 VG fir framing and skinned with 1/8" birch door skins.
All cabinet doors are nothing more than 6mm Baltic birch. cheap hinges, and friction catches.
6,000BTU furnace gravity (no 12V) with retrofitted millivolt safety vale and wall t-stat and an LP oven/range from the 1960's
DIY range hood and powered/filtered vent
12vDC Dometic fridge
Dual 100AH 6V deep cycle FLA batteries
Still rocking the original 20A ecoworthy MPPT charge controller, Victron amp counter, and dual 24V renogy 100Watt panels
Foot switch for sink pump
DIY composting toilet
Simple 12V with LED bulb clamshell lighting
12VDC under cab lights for workspace and table lighting
Isolated coil 8" thick futon mattress
Dinette that breaks down into a spare bed
Rear book case
Rear 5kBTU AC unit (120v)
100% wool berber carpet over epoxy-coated floor w/ area rugs
Simple rope hung 2-stage curtains. Light filtering and light blockout.
Cabinets in the cab-over are for clothing
Vertically stacked cabinets left of fridge is a full food pantry
Cabinets below sink provide storage for disk cleaning stuffs and access to water tank
Cabinet below and to the left of sink is for cookie sheets
Cabinet below stove is a tip-out garbage and bag storage
Cabinets above stove and sink are dishes, spices, tea/drink mixes
Coat closet above furnace
Cabinet above fridge is primality linens, personal items
Cabinet below fridge is a bit of a catch all. 12VC vacuum, first aid kit, cleaning supplies, etc...
All in all, it performs better than ever imagined. And I wouldn't change a thing.
I do have plans however for a couple more shallow overhead cabinets on the side walls above the dinette,
for more storage for books and seasonal items like hats, gloves, etc.