(Trickin' The Sprinter - Part Two)
A long overdue follow-up to the Sway Bar and Koni Shocks installation.
I installed the sway bar, and night and day is right. It's a different vehicle. These heavy duty anti-sway bars should be standard OEM, or at the very least the very first thing a new Sprinter owner should fix. The rollover feeling when negotiating 'S' curves is gone. The rock 'n roll of the ruts in the road when pulling out of a truck stop and back out onto the road is dramatically reduced. A big truck passing you, or visa versa, no longer jerks the steering wheel out of your hands. Strong crosswinds result in a gentle nudge instead of a dramatic kick.
I installed the Koni shocks and struts two weeks later specifically so that I could judge their performance difference without being too influenced by the sway bar if I had installed them at the same time. The Koni's resulted in another night and day kind of thing. What roll or sway that still remained with heavy crosswinds is pretty much eliminated. The rut rock and roll is a faint memory. No front end dips when stopping, either.
Standard OEM and after market shocks generally need replacing at about 60,000 miles, anyway, so my originals at 90,000 were more than wore out. That may be a part of such a dramatic difference the Koni's make. The Koni's won't smooth out Detroit or Chicago, but they make it a lot smoother than the OEM's did when new. They're very heavy duty, and are set at about 85%, because you need that when loaded. The high setting and the 55 front / 80 rear tire pressure make the unloaded ride a little bumpy, but not bad at all, especially with the nitrogen in the tires that helps smooth out the ride. But, I can live with a little bumpiness, especially since a loaded ride is so much more smooth. Those using a Sprinter as a passenger van will almost certainly use lower tire pressures, which will definitely smooth out the ride, but with expediting, lower tire pressures destroy the load rating of the tires.
I took some time off when doing all this and took the opportunity to make some other improvements. Mostly minor, some major. I added a bug shield on the front and added the window rain guards. Both made dramatic improvements. I also had the side windows tinted, which in some ways may be the most dramatic improvement of all. It resulted in a major cooling of the interior, and nearly eliminates the sun glare problem when the sun is low and comes in the passenger or driver side window.
I also finished insulating the van, and re-insulated some parts. The rear doors and the side sliding door had not yet been insulated, as well as the exposed white parts along the sides where the cargo lights are. I used this time to re-insulated the side walls, as well, running the silver bubble-pack all the way up, creating a sealed barrier between the gray side panels and the foam insulation on the walls.
A couple of notes about insulating the doors. There are serviceable electronic parts in there, so be careful what you bury under canned foam. Also, on the driver-side rear door, there is the lock-bar mechanism where a long rod sticks an inch or so out of the bottom of the door, and the one that sticks out of the top of the door. These catch and secure the door closed. You might want to, uhm, sort of avoid letting the canned foam ooze its way into the area surrounding those lock rods. hehe Also, the latch that the lock rods are pinned to can and will fill with foam, resulting in a frozen piece of sculpture. The only fix is to remove the latch and scrape away the foam, and then white grease it. Actually, that turned out to be a good thing, cause that latch was always hard to open. Once cleaned and greased up, it's an easy open latch now.
But, and this is a big but, if you do take the latch mechanism off, which is brain-dead easy to do and not any trouble at all, before you remove the first screw on the latch, take a vice grip and lock it onto the inch or so of the top lock rod that protrudes out the top of the door. If you fail to do this, as soon as you remove the latch mechanism the top lock rod will drop like a brick (or rather, like a long heavy rod of solid steel, which is exactly what it is). You will not be able to thread that rod back up into the hole in the top of the door. Trust me on this.
And the rods aren't straight. They are crooked bent and even snaking it down through the top of the door is harder than Chinese arithmetic, if you can eventually get it out of the opening where the latch mechanism is. Vise Grip. I mean it. (of course, it tells you all this in the Service Manual, which, of course, I read fully after the lock rod dropped like a brick).
I also spent time building shelves for the van. A lot of time. I'm no carpenter, but I do know my way around a piece of wood. The more I got into this the harder it got. Nothing inside the van is square, there are no right angles. A bubble type level is useless because even if you could park the van in such a way that the floor is level, as soon as you get into the cargo are it's no longer level. Getting the brackets that held the shelves not only level with each other, but level relative to the floor was a tour de force in tedium, particularly in the no-rain 95 degree heat that was present the entire time I worked on all this.
Level brackets and shelves were a piece of cake compared to the supports that held everything. The van walls are curved, and as it turns out each support (6 of them) has a different curve. So a stencil of sorts was out of the question. Each support was a different depth, as are all of the shelves. And as you can see from the pics below, that 1-foot high "skid guide" side wall bows out at the wheel wells, so the depth of the shelves and the supports vary all along the length of that thing. At the wheel well the depth between the van wall and the inside of the skid guide is 8 1/2 inches, and at the back door it is 7 1/2 inches. That's on the passenger side. On the driver's side it's different by half an inch.
Even the length of the shelves from front to back is different on the driver and passenger side. One is 74 1/2 and the other is 74 3/4. There are no two pieces of wood that are the same size. Each piece is truly customized for its place. Each shelf will only fit right where it is.
Just slappin' up 2x4's to get right angles and go from there was not an option, as that would have resulted in shelves that were about 4 inches deep everywhere. The supports also needed to be close enough to the walls in order to secure them properly. The supports were secured with brackets at the cargo light level, at the middle, and onto the floor, as well as a screw driven through the skid guide. The shelves were secured to the supports with 4 brackets each. No squeaks.
I also spray painted something called Plasti-Dip onto the tops of the shelves. Plasti-Drip is rubber. Plasti-Dip comes in a regular paint can-like thing where you can dip tools and stuff into it to coat them. It also comes in a spray can like spray paint. 4-6 heavy coats (unlike 2-3 light coats for regular paint) is needed. The rubber coated shelves reduce rattling, and things simply won't slide around. They'll fall over, but they won't bounce or slide all over the place. I finished it all off with lips on the front of the shelves to keep things from flying all over the van with each turn. So far, nothing has fallen off.
On the passenger side you'll see the holes and the air intake hose for the Espar heater. It's mounted on the floor in front of the wheel well and just behind the bunk. I also built a box enclosure to keep it covered up and protected.
Posted pics of the left rear door, but the other door and sliding door, as well as the walls and roof, were insulated the same way.
I couldn't get any pictures to upload directly, regardless of filesize or dimension. And other than thumbnails, no direct links would work, either, regardless of filesize or dimensions. Pooey. So, here are thumbnails, with the link to each full-sized picture right below it (couldn't get clickable thumbnails to work, neither). Also, at the very bottom, there are two links, one to the gallery of the photos at full size (2-3MB in size) and one to a gallery of the pics where they are all less than 100k each, but roughly 1024x768.
Both galleries also have a picture of someone who kept eying me from just inside the barn. You'd never know from the picture, and I certainly didn't know until I went to change batteries in the camera and he came on out, but he's between 5-7 feet long and as big around as a baseball bat. You'll never see it in the thumbnail. For some reason, we don't have any rats or mice around the barn.
Any questions about anything you see, just let me know.
The door:
Remember - Vise Grip!
http://img3.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/c/5/7/9/c579cf5edecedee1ad362b2353a2ed1beb43a8ac.jpg
http://img3.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=c579cf5edecedee1ad362b2353a2ed1beb43a8ac
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In the full-size pic you can make out FoamFly. I wouldn't recommend it, but that canned foam, once it reaches a certain state, makes a great fly paper. (I did finally remove FoamFly before installing the silver bubble pack. I had too many Edgar Allen Poe thoughts running through my head to actually go through with it. hehe) I was more worried about keeping the foam off the license plate lights that I never gave a second's thought about the foam getting into the latch mechanism and lock rod areas. Whoops.
http://img4.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/d/1/0/3/d10319831223ee051cd7ef045f164a7a219244b9.jpg
http://img4.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=d10319831223ee051cd7ef045f164a7a219244b9
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The bubble-pack, every seam sealed with foil tape
http://img4.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/8/b/5/2/8b52d6c83eec448c7e36c80a6cd5a90c7ce132ee.jpg
http://img4.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=8b52d6c83eec448c7e36c80a6cd5a90c7ce132ee
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Tape detail, and a featured shot of the latch mechanism that came off in 15 seconds, but because I didn't secure the lock rod with a vise grip, and the canned foam oozed into the mechanism, it didn't go back on the door until a day and a half later.
http://img3.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/8/9/f/0/89f0b1e5a746fd7f18ae9f9cceb11233a542cdd8.jpg
http://img3.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=89f0b1e5a746fd7f18ae9f9cceb11233a542cdd8
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The door panels all put back on.
Oooohhhhh, preeettty!
http://img3.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/5/9/1/1/5911be8f8f966be37dd3a1fcf0ef6775e5c31263.jpg
http://img3.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=5911be8f8f966be37dd3a1fcf0ef6775e5c31263
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My supervisor
http://img4.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/2/d/f/6/2df6b09e0f98e0983c0af8203f9862ea0568b486.jpg
http://img4.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=2df6b09e0f98e0983c0af8203f9862ea0568b486
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The Wood: Spruce - 3/4"x9"x 8'long
http://img4.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/9/d/4/d/9d4db088f4bef0a7837df2d5b52d520bcd99d4d5.jpg
http://img4.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=9d4db088f4bef0a7837df2d5b52d520bcd99d4d5
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First of the supports in place, view from inside. Tops all rounded off and pretty. Unfortunately, the doors to the barn are a couple of feet too low to get the Sprinter in there.
http://img4.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/f/b/d/d/fbdd41786235932a98f6b887e09bc161b9d6a55c.jpg
http://img4.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=fbdd41786235932a98f6b887e09bc161b9d6a55c
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Same supports, outside view. Duh.
http://img3.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/5/c/5/d/5c5dde902fc62220dbb7f86b41d5a06caca0fa06.jpg
http://img3.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=5c5dde902fc62220dbb7f86b41d5a06caca0fa06
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Ah, more Supports have arrived, as well as my other drill. An overhead light bulb has appeared, but it proved much more effective at attracting bugs than it did in helping me work after dark.
http://img4.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/4/a/f/b/4afb3fdb88ffa2d19fdb6bc8345499feb0384be2.jpg
http://img4.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=4afb3fdb88ffa2d19fdb6bc8345499feb0384be2
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All six Supports. I cannot tell you how long it took to do these. Well, I could, but it's embarrassing, so I won't.
http://img4.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/e/7/8/6/e786761d167b85165b607b9dcf161a1e2d3eaa24.jpg
http://img4.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=e786761d167b85165b607b9dcf161a1e2d3eaa24
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The Shelves, cut to fit. The bottom-most shelves are in the 8 1/2" deep range, while the top shelves are in the 4 1/2 in range. Just deep enough for a quart of oil to fit up there. Also note the 4" holes for the Espar heater intake hose.
http://img4.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/e/8/7/d/e87d96ae74ccc8e0a0a7d65635229b177fcd84fe.jpg
http://img4.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=e87d96ae74ccc8e0a0a7d65635229b177fcd84fe
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Another shot of the shelves
http://img3.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/c/2/c/7/c2c7f953eb26c7d62a9ef724e580bfc111fab827.jpg
http://img3.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=c2c7f953eb26c7d62a9ef724e580bfc111fab827
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Painted Supports. Painted with 3 coats of spray paint, a gloss, then a couple or three coats of a spray acrylic, a satin. The satin acrylic on top of the gloss paint gave me an almost exact match of the plastic gray sidewall panels that came with the van.
The rear of the bunk got painted, too.
http://img3.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/1/9/2/0/192048a9b4393dcbaa4042421e500b487084f28f.jpg
http://img3.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=192048a9b4393dcbaa4042421e500b487084f28f
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The other Supports. The vent in the back of the bunk, out in the cargo area, is a heat output from the heater. The other hole on the right in the bunk is a passive vent hole for the bunk itself, and will be covered with a vent.
http://img4.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/9/8/3/4/9834ef6dc4d35d76f3225414e661372f273c5f1c.jpg
http://img4.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=9834ef6dc4d35d
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Painted shelves in place. I painted the bottom of the shelves with a flat gray paint that looked too silver on the wood, didn't match at all, so I didn't use any more of that paint. The tops of the shelves are sprayed with that Plasti-Dip rubber stuff. Works extremely well, too.
http://img3.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/5/4/1/7/54176e0c95a12b9e24dfa0e0838c24c7cd2217e3.jpg
http://img3.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=54176e0c95a12b9e24dfa0e0838c24c7cd2217e3
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All the shelves, painted, rubberized, and ready for lips.
http://img3.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/9/3/6/3/9363e437d14d6df8d5d5628f7a3020d6ea39262e.jpg
http://img3.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=9363e437d14d6df8d5d5628f7a3020d6ea39262e
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The Lips
http://img4.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/6/e/f/6/6ef6c3518e3f91e76a9b80cdf05aa5fb66b52849.jpg
http://img4.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=6ef6c3518e3f91e76a9b80cdf05aa5fb66b52849
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More Lips
http://img4.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/e/b/a/3/eba3f846e5f366cce458a0ea66248b3d1fde5614.jpg
http://img4.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=eba3f846e5f366cce458a0ea66248b3d1fde5614
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Detail of the lips and the rubber. The lips are constructed out of 1/4" high density birch plywood.
http://img4.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/2/8/4/9/2849ffce0e238c761d5e229b803eec3182c10f16.jpg
http://img4.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=2849ffce0e238c761d5e229b803eec3182c10f16
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Gimme a kiss, baby!
http://img4.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/b/d/5/2/bd521368f2c2342b7fe8a0a4250034df7bc17884.jpg
http://img4.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=bd521368f2c2342b7fe8a0a4250034df7bc17884
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Wow, suddenly it seems a lot smaller in here.
http://img4.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/b/2/f/3/b2f3c532473833f2de9e5b28cc21a04ba1dddf31.jpg
http://img4.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=b2f3c532473833f2de9e5b28cc21a04ba1dddf31
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All done. Yipee!
http://img4.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/4/f/d/3/4fd3b4585797cfca64fc16ae09ee27a6c45ff541.jpg
http://img4.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=4fd3b4585797cfca64fc16ae09ee27a6c45ff541
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The shelves, with stuff on them.
http://img4.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/5/e/d/2/5ed2d1521df6566070ea1fbfe88225ec06e00810.jpg
http://img4.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=5ed2d1521df6566070ea1fbfe88225ec06e00810
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Closeup of the shelves, with stuff on them.
http://img4.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/8/f/b/b/8fbb717b2291ab38318a156f3220cbef0d4c5ef0.jpg
http://img4.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=8fbb717b2291ab38318a156f3220cbef0d4c5ef0
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The other shelves, with stuff on them.
http://img4.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/c/9/e/4/c9e4a47801487c6f44f56ff77c59e84a4d147e5c.jpg
http://img4.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=c9e4a47801487c6f44f56ff77c59e84a4d147e5c
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Closeup of the other shelves, with stuff on them.
http://img4.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/3/8/4/7/3847eda787a6b3235c0b0aba30cffc280f166e15.jpg
http://img4.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=3847eda787a6b3235c0b0aba30cffc280f166e15
The Picture Galleries
Full-size pics 2-3MB each
http://img1.shareavenue.com/gallery.php?file=73a3636ad3dc22c58848b176f7e3332bce2373b3
Smaller pics, less than 100k each.
http://img1.shareavenue.com/gallery.php?file=6dc901d7b8e0669b9456ca11957b2f7331171738
A long overdue follow-up to the Sway Bar and Koni Shocks installation.
I installed the sway bar, and night and day is right. It's a different vehicle. These heavy duty anti-sway bars should be standard OEM, or at the very least the very first thing a new Sprinter owner should fix. The rollover feeling when negotiating 'S' curves is gone. The rock 'n roll of the ruts in the road when pulling out of a truck stop and back out onto the road is dramatically reduced. A big truck passing you, or visa versa, no longer jerks the steering wheel out of your hands. Strong crosswinds result in a gentle nudge instead of a dramatic kick.
I installed the Koni shocks and struts two weeks later specifically so that I could judge their performance difference without being too influenced by the sway bar if I had installed them at the same time. The Koni's resulted in another night and day kind of thing. What roll or sway that still remained with heavy crosswinds is pretty much eliminated. The rut rock and roll is a faint memory. No front end dips when stopping, either.
Standard OEM and after market shocks generally need replacing at about 60,000 miles, anyway, so my originals at 90,000 were more than wore out. That may be a part of such a dramatic difference the Koni's make. The Koni's won't smooth out Detroit or Chicago, but they make it a lot smoother than the OEM's did when new. They're very heavy duty, and are set at about 85%, because you need that when loaded. The high setting and the 55 front / 80 rear tire pressure make the unloaded ride a little bumpy, but not bad at all, especially with the nitrogen in the tires that helps smooth out the ride. But, I can live with a little bumpiness, especially since a loaded ride is so much more smooth. Those using a Sprinter as a passenger van will almost certainly use lower tire pressures, which will definitely smooth out the ride, but with expediting, lower tire pressures destroy the load rating of the tires.
I took some time off when doing all this and took the opportunity to make some other improvements. Mostly minor, some major. I added a bug shield on the front and added the window rain guards. Both made dramatic improvements. I also had the side windows tinted, which in some ways may be the most dramatic improvement of all. It resulted in a major cooling of the interior, and nearly eliminates the sun glare problem when the sun is low and comes in the passenger or driver side window.
I also finished insulating the van, and re-insulated some parts. The rear doors and the side sliding door had not yet been insulated, as well as the exposed white parts along the sides where the cargo lights are. I used this time to re-insulated the side walls, as well, running the silver bubble-pack all the way up, creating a sealed barrier between the gray side panels and the foam insulation on the walls.
A couple of notes about insulating the doors. There are serviceable electronic parts in there, so be careful what you bury under canned foam. Also, on the driver-side rear door, there is the lock-bar mechanism where a long rod sticks an inch or so out of the bottom of the door, and the one that sticks out of the top of the door. These catch and secure the door closed. You might want to, uhm, sort of avoid letting the canned foam ooze its way into the area surrounding those lock rods. hehe Also, the latch that the lock rods are pinned to can and will fill with foam, resulting in a frozen piece of sculpture. The only fix is to remove the latch and scrape away the foam, and then white grease it. Actually, that turned out to be a good thing, cause that latch was always hard to open. Once cleaned and greased up, it's an easy open latch now.
But, and this is a big but, if you do take the latch mechanism off, which is brain-dead easy to do and not any trouble at all, before you remove the first screw on the latch, take a vice grip and lock it onto the inch or so of the top lock rod that protrudes out the top of the door. If you fail to do this, as soon as you remove the latch mechanism the top lock rod will drop like a brick (or rather, like a long heavy rod of solid steel, which is exactly what it is). You will not be able to thread that rod back up into the hole in the top of the door. Trust me on this.
And the rods aren't straight. They are crooked bent and even snaking it down through the top of the door is harder than Chinese arithmetic, if you can eventually get it out of the opening where the latch mechanism is. Vise Grip. I mean it. (of course, it tells you all this in the Service Manual, which, of course, I read fully after the lock rod dropped like a brick).
I also spent time building shelves for the van. A lot of time. I'm no carpenter, but I do know my way around a piece of wood. The more I got into this the harder it got. Nothing inside the van is square, there are no right angles. A bubble type level is useless because even if you could park the van in such a way that the floor is level, as soon as you get into the cargo are it's no longer level. Getting the brackets that held the shelves not only level with each other, but level relative to the floor was a tour de force in tedium, particularly in the no-rain 95 degree heat that was present the entire time I worked on all this.
Level brackets and shelves were a piece of cake compared to the supports that held everything. The van walls are curved, and as it turns out each support (6 of them) has a different curve. So a stencil of sorts was out of the question. Each support was a different depth, as are all of the shelves. And as you can see from the pics below, that 1-foot high "skid guide" side wall bows out at the wheel wells, so the depth of the shelves and the supports vary all along the length of that thing. At the wheel well the depth between the van wall and the inside of the skid guide is 8 1/2 inches, and at the back door it is 7 1/2 inches. That's on the passenger side. On the driver's side it's different by half an inch.
Even the length of the shelves from front to back is different on the driver and passenger side. One is 74 1/2 and the other is 74 3/4. There are no two pieces of wood that are the same size. Each piece is truly customized for its place. Each shelf will only fit right where it is.
Just slappin' up 2x4's to get right angles and go from there was not an option, as that would have resulted in shelves that were about 4 inches deep everywhere. The supports also needed to be close enough to the walls in order to secure them properly. The supports were secured with brackets at the cargo light level, at the middle, and onto the floor, as well as a screw driven through the skid guide. The shelves were secured to the supports with 4 brackets each. No squeaks.
I also spray painted something called Plasti-Dip onto the tops of the shelves. Plasti-Drip is rubber. Plasti-Dip comes in a regular paint can-like thing where you can dip tools and stuff into it to coat them. It also comes in a spray can like spray paint. 4-6 heavy coats (unlike 2-3 light coats for regular paint) is needed. The rubber coated shelves reduce rattling, and things simply won't slide around. They'll fall over, but they won't bounce or slide all over the place. I finished it all off with lips on the front of the shelves to keep things from flying all over the van with each turn. So far, nothing has fallen off.
On the passenger side you'll see the holes and the air intake hose for the Espar heater. It's mounted on the floor in front of the wheel well and just behind the bunk. I also built a box enclosure to keep it covered up and protected.
Posted pics of the left rear door, but the other door and sliding door, as well as the walls and roof, were insulated the same way.
I couldn't get any pictures to upload directly, regardless of filesize or dimension. And other than thumbnails, no direct links would work, either, regardless of filesize or dimensions. Pooey. So, here are thumbnails, with the link to each full-sized picture right below it (couldn't get clickable thumbnails to work, neither). Also, at the very bottom, there are two links, one to the gallery of the photos at full size (2-3MB in size) and one to a gallery of the pics where they are all less than 100k each, but roughly 1024x768.
Both galleries also have a picture of someone who kept eying me from just inside the barn. You'd never know from the picture, and I certainly didn't know until I went to change batteries in the camera and he came on out, but he's between 5-7 feet long and as big around as a baseball bat. You'll never see it in the thumbnail. For some reason, we don't have any rats or mice around the barn.
Any questions about anything you see, just let me know.
The door:
Remember - Vise Grip!
http://img3.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/c/5/7/9/c579cf5edecedee1ad362b2353a2ed1beb43a8ac.jpg
http://img3.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=c579cf5edecedee1ad362b2353a2ed1beb43a8ac
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In the full-size pic you can make out FoamFly. I wouldn't recommend it, but that canned foam, once it reaches a certain state, makes a great fly paper. (I did finally remove FoamFly before installing the silver bubble pack. I had too many Edgar Allen Poe thoughts running through my head to actually go through with it. hehe) I was more worried about keeping the foam off the license plate lights that I never gave a second's thought about the foam getting into the latch mechanism and lock rod areas. Whoops.
http://img4.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/d/1/0/3/d10319831223ee051cd7ef045f164a7a219244b9.jpg
http://img4.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=d10319831223ee051cd7ef045f164a7a219244b9
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The bubble-pack, every seam sealed with foil tape
http://img4.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/8/b/5/2/8b52d6c83eec448c7e36c80a6cd5a90c7ce132ee.jpg
http://img4.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=8b52d6c83eec448c7e36c80a6cd5a90c7ce132ee
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Tape detail, and a featured shot of the latch mechanism that came off in 15 seconds, but because I didn't secure the lock rod with a vise grip, and the canned foam oozed into the mechanism, it didn't go back on the door until a day and a half later.
http://img3.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/8/9/f/0/89f0b1e5a746fd7f18ae9f9cceb11233a542cdd8.jpg
http://img3.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=89f0b1e5a746fd7f18ae9f9cceb11233a542cdd8
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The door panels all put back on.
Oooohhhhh, preeettty!
http://img3.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/5/9/1/1/5911be8f8f966be37dd3a1fcf0ef6775e5c31263.jpg
http://img3.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=5911be8f8f966be37dd3a1fcf0ef6775e5c31263
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My supervisor
http://img4.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/2/d/f/6/2df6b09e0f98e0983c0af8203f9862ea0568b486.jpg
http://img4.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=2df6b09e0f98e0983c0af8203f9862ea0568b486
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The Wood: Spruce - 3/4"x9"x 8'long
http://img4.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/9/d/4/d/9d4db088f4bef0a7837df2d5b52d520bcd99d4d5.jpg
http://img4.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=9d4db088f4bef0a7837df2d5b52d520bcd99d4d5
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First of the supports in place, view from inside. Tops all rounded off and pretty. Unfortunately, the doors to the barn are a couple of feet too low to get the Sprinter in there.
http://img4.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/f/b/d/d/fbdd41786235932a98f6b887e09bc161b9d6a55c.jpg
http://img4.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=fbdd41786235932a98f6b887e09bc161b9d6a55c
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Same supports, outside view. Duh.
http://img3.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/5/c/5/d/5c5dde902fc62220dbb7f86b41d5a06caca0fa06.jpg
http://img3.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=5c5dde902fc62220dbb7f86b41d5a06caca0fa06
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Ah, more Supports have arrived, as well as my other drill. An overhead light bulb has appeared, but it proved much more effective at attracting bugs than it did in helping me work after dark.
http://img4.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/4/a/f/b/4afb3fdb88ffa2d19fdb6bc8345499feb0384be2.jpg
http://img4.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=4afb3fdb88ffa2d19fdb6bc8345499feb0384be2
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All six Supports. I cannot tell you how long it took to do these. Well, I could, but it's embarrassing, so I won't.
http://img4.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/e/7/8/6/e786761d167b85165b607b9dcf161a1e2d3eaa24.jpg
http://img4.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=e786761d167b85165b607b9dcf161a1e2d3eaa24
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The Shelves, cut to fit. The bottom-most shelves are in the 8 1/2" deep range, while the top shelves are in the 4 1/2 in range. Just deep enough for a quart of oil to fit up there. Also note the 4" holes for the Espar heater intake hose.
http://img4.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/e/8/7/d/e87d96ae74ccc8e0a0a7d65635229b177fcd84fe.jpg
http://img4.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=e87d96ae74ccc8e0a0a7d65635229b177fcd84fe
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Another shot of the shelves
http://img3.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/c/2/c/7/c2c7f953eb26c7d62a9ef724e580bfc111fab827.jpg
http://img3.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=c2c7f953eb26c7d62a9ef724e580bfc111fab827
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Painted Supports. Painted with 3 coats of spray paint, a gloss, then a couple or three coats of a spray acrylic, a satin. The satin acrylic on top of the gloss paint gave me an almost exact match of the plastic gray sidewall panels that came with the van.
The rear of the bunk got painted, too.
http://img3.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/1/9/2/0/192048a9b4393dcbaa4042421e500b487084f28f.jpg
http://img3.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=192048a9b4393dcbaa4042421e500b487084f28f
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The other Supports. The vent in the back of the bunk, out in the cargo area, is a heat output from the heater. The other hole on the right in the bunk is a passive vent hole for the bunk itself, and will be covered with a vent.
http://img4.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/9/8/3/4/9834ef6dc4d35d76f3225414e661372f273c5f1c.jpg
http://img4.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=9834ef6dc4d35d
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Painted shelves in place. I painted the bottom of the shelves with a flat gray paint that looked too silver on the wood, didn't match at all, so I didn't use any more of that paint. The tops of the shelves are sprayed with that Plasti-Dip rubber stuff. Works extremely well, too.
http://img3.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/5/4/1/7/54176e0c95a12b9e24dfa0e0838c24c7cd2217e3.jpg
http://img3.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=54176e0c95a12b9e24dfa0e0838c24c7cd2217e3
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All the shelves, painted, rubberized, and ready for lips.
http://img3.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/9/3/6/3/9363e437d14d6df8d5d5628f7a3020d6ea39262e.jpg
http://img3.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=9363e437d14d6df8d5d5628f7a3020d6ea39262e
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The Lips
http://img4.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/6/e/f/6/6ef6c3518e3f91e76a9b80cdf05aa5fb66b52849.jpg
http://img4.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=6ef6c3518e3f91e76a9b80cdf05aa5fb66b52849
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More Lips
http://img4.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/e/b/a/3/eba3f846e5f366cce458a0ea66248b3d1fde5614.jpg
http://img4.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=eba3f846e5f366cce458a0ea66248b3d1fde5614
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Detail of the lips and the rubber. The lips are constructed out of 1/4" high density birch plywood.
http://img4.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/2/8/4/9/2849ffce0e238c761d5e229b803eec3182c10f16.jpg
http://img4.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=2849ffce0e238c761d5e229b803eec3182c10f16
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Gimme a kiss, baby!
http://img4.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/b/d/5/2/bd521368f2c2342b7fe8a0a4250034df7bc17884.jpg
http://img4.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=bd521368f2c2342b7fe8a0a4250034df7bc17884
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Wow, suddenly it seems a lot smaller in here.
http://img4.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/b/2/f/3/b2f3c532473833f2de9e5b28cc21a04ba1dddf31.jpg
http://img4.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=b2f3c532473833f2de9e5b28cc21a04ba1dddf31
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All done. Yipee!
http://img4.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/4/f/d/3/4fd3b4585797cfca64fc16ae09ee27a6c45ff541.jpg
http://img4.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=4fd3b4585797cfca64fc16ae09ee27a6c45ff541
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The shelves, with stuff on them.
http://img4.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/5/e/d/2/5ed2d1521df6566070ea1fbfe88225ec06e00810.jpg
http://img4.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=5ed2d1521df6566070ea1fbfe88225ec06e00810
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Closeup of the shelves, with stuff on them.
http://img4.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/8/f/b/b/8fbb717b2291ab38318a156f3220cbef0d4c5ef0.jpg
http://img4.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=8fbb717b2291ab38318a156f3220cbef0d4c5ef0
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The other shelves, with stuff on them.
http://img4.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/c/9/e/4/c9e4a47801487c6f44f56ff77c59e84a4d147e5c.jpg
http://img4.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=c9e4a47801487c6f44f56ff77c59e84a4d147e5c
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Closeup of the other shelves, with stuff on them.
http://img4.shareavenue.com/thumbnails/3/8/4/7/3847eda787a6b3235c0b0aba30cffc280f166e15.jpg
http://img4.shareavenue.com/image.php?file=3847eda787a6b3235c0b0aba30cffc280f166e15
The Picture Galleries
Full-size pics 2-3MB each
http://img1.shareavenue.com/gallery.php?file=73a3636ad3dc22c58848b176f7e3332bce2373b3
Smaller pics, less than 100k each.
http://img1.shareavenue.com/gallery.php?file=6dc901d7b8e0669b9456ca11957b2f7331171738