It may be Thomas HeatonI saw a build like that in the back of a Land Rover 110 and have never been able to find the website since. He was a photographer and traveled all over in it.
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It may be Thomas HeatonI saw a build like that in the back of a Land Rover 110 and have never been able to find the website since. He was a photographer and traveled all over in it.
I'm always amazed at the full layouts people put into the van. It must weigh a ton and seriously reduce the efficiency of the vehicle. I remember work doing a build on a van and after putting everyones 'good ideas' in it was overweight with just the racking and stowages.
Yeah I don't get that either.... . But then again, when wild camping I'll never go without my Espro Travel Press, so I guess it's horses for courses!And, don't forget the string of LED lights around the van or awning
That's true with campers these days as well.
Yeah I don't get that either.... . But then again, when wild camping I'll never go without my Espro Travel Press, so I guess it's horses for courses!
If I did it all again, I'd still go for a VW T5/6 because it's perfect for me in every way. Buuuuuut..... I would go for the following design:I really didn’t need reminding about the Espro, but it’s a good call for a camper so I think I’ll have to order a couple. We started off using one of the Italian mocha percs, then a bigger French press. Both a faff, especially the Italian one that was prone to falling off the hob at the height of percolation.
We used to bung everything in, fill the 80ltr water tank, cups plates, cutlery etc. Now it’s about half a tank of water, a cup and plate each, two teaspoons, two cutlery sets, one thin plastic board, and an all rounder folding knife (Chinese Boker Magnum copy, the cleaver bladed thing). I’ve always got a knife in my pocket and there’s a Leatherman in the tool bag.
Rather than built in cupboards and clever panelling, we have a mini top bunk (shelf) for chucking stuff in use like coats or jumpers, a pretty small double bed beneath it, and deck level storage beneath that was a bed space with a mattress and loads of coloured LEDs for the previous owners lad. That’s main storage for camp chairs, BBQ firebowl, logs, wellies, spare clothing etc. Most of that is in plastic storage containers so there’s not too much searching about. We get more minimal every time we go, often down to forgetting stuff and cursing, only to realise we didn’t really need it anyway.
We do have a wet room cabinet like on a narrow boat, cassette toilet and shower. The boiler runs on gas or hookup and does about 15 litres of hot. Never had a shower in there, but it’s handy for muddy dogs and keeping the loo clean. The microwave fitted by the previous owner has gone and that space is general stuff like peanut butter, marmalade, dog food, peanuts etc. We used to put those things in a storage container but it was a PITA dragging the thing out to undo the lid.
Vans are pretty tight spaces, so if one is desperate for the loo, while the other is desperate for the Marmite, or a towel, dog lead, glasses, phone, toothbrush etc, it pretty soon works itself out by priority and organisation.
Dustpan and stiff brush essential and used daily for floor and bed, one of the 150m tight wound blue rolls too.
Mike, the dragon, he lives in there too. Not always on the dash if we’re on one of the hookup, top-up, empty bog sites. A lot of them are a bit funny about DIY conversions these days.
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The youtuber I recommended designs his cupboards around light and structurally. He does some really interesting things with double and triple purposes. It is really interesting to watch the videos in time order as he upgrades which is one of the things he recommends that there will be problems that you need to solve.Kinda agree - the further down the path of ' making this a house ' the more specialised and heavy it become - I think one needs to keep things light , multi functional , modular and austere - to a point.
That’s my experience with our van, and my parents narrowboat, there’s always something. Most recent in the van is the leisure battery isn’t charging from the alternator. It’s not something I’d noticed as the solar panel on the roof confuses the issue, but we had a couple of nights out recently where I expected the driving between destinations would bung power to the leisure battery, but it didn’t.there will be problems that you need to solve.