. . . let me clarify the 4cylinder/4spd auto thing:
The camper was modified with a lowered 4.88 final drive. Better horsepower for Kansas headwind, better torque for going up the pass. Big improvement if you're driving a small house.
I'd love a 4x4 Sunrader, but a set of chains is more affordable, and it still gets you from Silverton to Durango in a March snowstorm. Three of us with gear, skiing, sleeping and cooking on a week-long trip. Loved it. Still friends.
From that trip, Sunlight Ski resort near Glenwood springs was the highlight: Podunk for all the best reasons. Laid back and friendly staff, permission to park overnight in the lot, uncrowded, and hypnotizing aspen glades. Stayed an extra day.
Not as convenient for dropping the kid off at preschool. Adventures are in a much smaller orbit nowadays.
12-04-2010, 09:40 AM
boltonoutlaw
1977 TOYOTA CHINOOK
@pajamas: Is that a splitboard?
Quote:
Originally Posted by montanamike
not a ski rv, but i saw this rig on the beach today and i had to share
There's a beach in Kansas?
10 days with the Chinook and the honeymoon isn't over. Was gripped for much of the time driving an unfamiliar 34 year-old vehicle 2000+ miles straight out of the gate. Ran out of gas 1st time in my life 11 PM in the southern tier of NY, drained the battery, and met a kindly Sheriff (all in Salamanca), slept two nights on the road, had Thanksgiving in VT, and registered with the DMV next day. Replaced the alternator, interrupter, and some wiring and now the drain is solved. Passed a fitness test and we are ready for inspection. Re-packing the rear suspension Monday, and lining up some other jobs but everyone who has had it on a lift is amazed at its condition (knock on wood).
Bought a 1988 Samurai that I'm in the process of tweaking for a pop up camper, redneck 4x4. As it is now, the upper bed is 4' long that extends to 6.5 feet for sleeping. Building a sink, stove, heater, etc in the back.
Got the pop up camper done today, now I'm cutting the rust out, doing a lift kit, putting on bigger wheels, new transfer case, locking differentials, etc, etc. http://i795.photobucket.com/albums/y...o/IMAG0072.jpg
Yes you are. The Sami is one of the most capable off the shelf 4wd rigs out there. Adding a pop up is pure genius.
But, you're prego, so, the hormones must be talking.
More RV stoke please.
12-20-2010, 05:35 AM
jon gaper
great idea
but are you aware that these babies had a rollover problem before
and now you have raised the center of gravity with the add-on
and the lift and the wheels?
that could be extremely dangerous
12-20-2010, 07:05 AM
Trackhead
Quote:
Originally Posted by jon gaper
great idea
but are you aware that these babies had a rollover problem before
and now you have raised the center of gravity with the add-on
and the lift and the wheels?
that could be extremely dangerous
-It's not lifted yet, it will be lifted 1.5" with softer springs, which DECREASES rollover potential due to softer springs.
-I has a much wider stance with the wide wheels and 1" wheel spacers.
-The camper net weight over stock is maybe 120lbs.
-The weight above the roof line is 20lbs of plywood and 8lbs of 2x2's. People put more weight over the roof line with spare tires.
It's not going to spontaneously roll. I've rallied it around the neighborhood in this configuration. It's solid. The rollover fear was a myth perpetuated by the media.
After my ski bum season living in the back of a minivan I completely fell in love with the idea of doing a huge journey in a RV for more than just the winter. Normal RVs aren't too wheelchair accessible and a 4x4 truck with roof tent or pop-ups are pretty useless too so I've been looking into panel van conversions a lot lately.
I want an auto diesel with 4x4 though and that narrows the field quite a bit, to just one vehicle actually: the Mercedes Benz 4x4 sprinter. If I win the lottery or one comes up for sale cheap I'll be dissapearing around the world in it.
I'm thinking about putting a propex heater into my Westy. Very nice. I met a guy a few years back hanging out @ the Village in a pop top Westy w/ a Propex heater going. Warm and comfy inside.
12-20-2010, 08:17 AM
TheDon
I just want to say that I LOVE this thread. Thanks for the RV stoke. It has always been one of my many dreams to do something similar to what you mags are getting done. Send it from the RV!!!
12-20-2010, 08:50 AM
jon gaper
Quote:
Originally Posted by Trackhead
-It's not lifted yet, it will be lifted 1.5" with softer springs, which DECREASES rollover potential due to softer springs.
-I has a much wider stance with the wide wheels and 1" wheel spacers.
-The camper net weight over stock is maybe 120lbs.
-The weight above the roof line is 20lbs of plywood and 8lbs of 2x2's. People put more weight over the roof line with spare tires.
It's not going to spontaneously roll. I've rallied it around the neighborhood in this configuration. It's solid. The rollover fear was a myth perpetuated by the media.
that's rad, and I'm guessing you've played this game before (since you're doing a sammy), but I would suggest a few things: softer springs only really means less rollover potential at slow off-road speeds. On-road you'll wanna lock that baby down with stiffer swaybars and disconnects. Also, if you are going to insist on those wheel spacers, torque the axle-to-spacer lug nuts frequently, like every hundred miles for a thousand miles or so. especially if your spacers are aluminum
12-20-2010, 03:04 PM
birdman829
Quote:
Originally Posted by khakis
that's rad, and I'm guessing you've played this game before (since you're doing a sammy), but I would suggest a few things: softer springs only really means less rollover potential at slow off-road speeds. On-road you'll wanna lock that baby down with stiffer swaybars and disconnects. Also, if you are going to insist on those wheel spacers, torque the axle-to-spacer lug nuts frequently, like every hundred miles for a thousand miles or so. especially if your spacers are aluminum
Solid advice here. My buddy had a lifted sami with spacers and he learned the hard way about torquing those shits. As for the rollover threat, I'm not really sure its a problem. With sway bars it wasn't terrible on the road (if you remember what it is you're driving and keep the speed reasonable. Then just disconnect the sways for more articulation and you're ready to conquer just about anything. Nothing like a Sami with a nice granny gear.
12-20-2010, 03:23 PM
Trackhead
Quote:
Originally Posted by khakis
that's rad, and I'm guessing you've played this game before (since you're doing a sammy), but I would suggest a few things:
Don't know shit about 4x4 stuff. I've been riding motos for two years, rebuilt a few of them from the ground up, now the mystery is gone, so it's on to something else.........
The Sammy is like my old snowcat, basic. So I picked it because of that, and a friend used to have one and suggested it. I might only have it for a year before I move on to something else. My mind wanders.
It's funny to hear about fear of rollover potential from skiers who can't stop talking about hucking their meat, skiing in avy terrain, etc. I drive like a grandpa, the Samurai is slow as shit, I'm not the LEAST bit concerned about rolling it.
12-20-2010, 04:27 PM
Sparwood Dave
RE Propex heater. Very favourable current requirements @ 1.9 amps compared to 7 amps draw for a conventional full size RV furnace
12-20-2010, 04:30 PM
khakis
Quote:
Originally Posted by Trackhead
I might only have it for a year before I move on to something else. My mind wanders.
ummm...dibs! Do me a favor and keep that camper removable so I can take it off for summer cruising :biggrin:
Trackhead is actually from Kentucky??? Tight rig man.
Used to sleep in the back of the 4Runner at mammoth, just me and a comforter, down bag just to kick around, no problem.
Got back from campervanning in NZ and built a bed into the 4Runner similar to the Element with storage underneath, little claustrophobic but not a problem sleeping, just had to change sideways. It’s doable folks.
Now rocking an ’82 Ford Class C motorhome by Tioga. Love that thing. You pay in gas and travel time but having something about hot food off the stove, cold beer in the fridge, sitting at the table playing cards at night that makes you happy. Haven’t taken it into serious cold or long journey yet though, little worried about the plumbing. Seems to handle Cascade temps alright.