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    Did I tell you this already? :-)

    July 22nd, 2005

    P7220053


    Some things don’t cost much

    July 20th, 2005

    Paintedwheels
    Whee! a rattle-can wheel painting job!


    Shower Pan

    June 27th, 2005

    Shower Pan

    The milk jug full of water may not be obvious, but the first use of the working shower drain was for this humble bus converter to sit cross-legged in the base and pour water over mah head.

    I won’t suffer you the pain of seeing that photo.



    Real-Time Project Management

    June 21st, 2005

    P6210107

    Yeah, I got gantt charts, I got CPM charts, I got project lists, I got spreadsheets. When the rubber hits the road, though, figuring it out in real time is the way it works for me!

    In the last day of the shower install, in a 103° working environment, you might notice the final deliverable…”Taka Showah!” :)


    The Shower Drain

    June 18th, 2005

    Shower drainOk, this one took me a long time to figure out. One of the biggest challenges in figuring out my floorplan was how to drain the water from the shower. As mentioned elsewhere, 99% of conversions have the ‘facilities’ located above the rearmost bay, so effluent goes directly down into the tanks.

    Well darnit, I was so stubborn about this that I had to make it work with a rear shower. I looked at all possibilities and kept coming up without a solution. The big challenge is that water must drain downhill, and when the shower is in the rear, the rear wheels and axles are in the way under the coach!

    Finally, I had the idea to run the drain line inside the air conditioning ductwork. It goes directly down, forward about five feet, and out the side of the ‘tunnel’, into the p-trap and down into the tank! Slanted as much as possible, of course.


    How, oh how am I supposed to work like this?

    June 15th, 2005

    P6150095

    Inside temperature in June.