Mos68x
Active member
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- Location
- Seligman,AZ
Ok, first off I'd like say... I really wish there was a separate category just for our camper builds since there are so many and I really don't know where it is supposed to go!! Ok, rant done lol
Now on to the meat and taters! My end goal for my 934A2 is to hold a 20' ISO shipping container on the back that will be transformed to be my RV/tiny house while I travel the Americas. I can't seem to find many, if any, instances of anyone else doing this kind of build so I thought I would post it up here. I always welcome y'all's opinions so go ahead and chime in any time.
I do have a general idea of where I want certain things to be, but beyond that I'm open to new ideas. I do know for sure that I want the bed to be above the truck cab, with the closets being where the tire davit and muffler normally sits. That is all add-on area to the ISO though, where the cargo bed normally starts is where the ISO will start. Working towards the rear, after the bed and closet area will be the bathroom and as compact as possible. I imagine the bath will be a walkway through the center, with the toilet on one side and shower on the other. After the bathroom will be the kitchen, this is mainly because I want all the plumbing area to be as compact as possible too, to include the gas plumbing as well. Then it will be the dining and living area, possibly followed by a storage area for my Harley. I am torn on where to put the Harley, part of me wants it in "house", but I also like the idea of just putting in a trailer that will also hold my wood shop tools for my business.
I was originally thinking making the sides fold down to create more floor space or a terrace/patio. But the more I think about it the more I'm interested in keeping it totally water tight. I already thought of a few designs for keeping it water tight with the walls folding down, but they will add unnessary complicated work that could fail at the most inoportune times. I might still keep that idea for the wood shop trailer though.
Now as for the truck itself, I've had a few ideas long before I ever bought it and that's where the title of the thread comes from. "BHTRV", Buoyant Half-Track Recreational Vehicle. I wanted it buoyant because of certain roads in the US that require ferry crossings and also because of the Darien Gap in Panama, but it will NOT be a full-time useage. The rear of the truck would be easy to keep buoyant...however the front will be a real engineering challenge. Before I had real weights to work with, yes I already stopped and got on the truck scales before I installed the cargo bed, I used the tare weight of an ISO and what I thought the weight of the truck might be. Of course I was way off for the trucks weights (front/rear), but nothing that would make it impossible. The water line for the ISO alone would be about 7.5in above the floor. I say floor and not the very bottom because I will be welding up and sealing the bottom where the ribs are for water storage, clean grey and black. The front weight of the truck was the only weight that was remotely close. I had figured 11k (true weight being 9840), which would require about 183ft^3 of air to make buoyant. I had thought of 55g drums, but that is impractical as that would require 25 drums. As for the rear I had figured (incorrectly) that the tandem weight would be about 28k (true weight being 9560), this would've put the water line at just under 3'. There are ideas for reducing the water line and increasing stability, but that is for later since the front really needs more work and consideration.
The next part should be self-explanatory, the half track part is for the rear wheels only and only for mud or snow. I think that wheel articulation for rock crawling will be too much for any add-on half-track setup that I come up with. Mind you the half track part (just like the buoyant part) is only as needed and NOT full-time. I have seen several roads in South and Central America (via YouTube) that would make even me nervous. So I figured that I would rather have a standby tire add-on setup to turn it into a half-track rather than be stuck out in the middle of nowhere where no one usually travels, and still not find anyone that would be able to recover this big beast. This will most likely be comprised of heavy chain and angle iron, but that may change. Of course, I missed having my truck during a really soggy winter for our area to test out the rear tire abilities during heavy mud/snow operations. My next chance probably won't be until our monsoon season, or next year at the latest.
Purchasing the truck was the very first part of this goal, now the next part is purchasing a 20' ISO container. I will be buying some heavy steel first to build a frame that will connect the ISO to the truck chassis. If I had a 20' ISO on hand to make measurements and test fit the frame it would be great, but then I would have no of lifting the ISO to put it on the truck. SketchUp has some drawings of them, but I just don't trust someone else's measurements to build for something unseen. I do have someone local that could bring in an ISO for a lot of $$$, and he has some sitting in town so I might try to see if he'll let me mock up a frame using one of his. It would be nice to be able to pick out a one tripper myself at the ports, but I just don't know if that will be cost effective yet considering I'll take the truck to get it and as of right now she only gets 6.5mpg.
Anyways, that's enough rambling on for me, if y'all have any ideas or suggestions I'm all ears. This project will be a long going one since I live on my meager military/VA pension.
Now on to the meat and taters! My end goal for my 934A2 is to hold a 20' ISO shipping container on the back that will be transformed to be my RV/tiny house while I travel the Americas. I can't seem to find many, if any, instances of anyone else doing this kind of build so I thought I would post it up here. I always welcome y'all's opinions so go ahead and chime in any time.
I do have a general idea of where I want certain things to be, but beyond that I'm open to new ideas. I do know for sure that I want the bed to be above the truck cab, with the closets being where the tire davit and muffler normally sits. That is all add-on area to the ISO though, where the cargo bed normally starts is where the ISO will start. Working towards the rear, after the bed and closet area will be the bathroom and as compact as possible. I imagine the bath will be a walkway through the center, with the toilet on one side and shower on the other. After the bathroom will be the kitchen, this is mainly because I want all the plumbing area to be as compact as possible too, to include the gas plumbing as well. Then it will be the dining and living area, possibly followed by a storage area for my Harley. I am torn on where to put the Harley, part of me wants it in "house", but I also like the idea of just putting in a trailer that will also hold my wood shop tools for my business.
I was originally thinking making the sides fold down to create more floor space or a terrace/patio. But the more I think about it the more I'm interested in keeping it totally water tight. I already thought of a few designs for keeping it water tight with the walls folding down, but they will add unnessary complicated work that could fail at the most inoportune times. I might still keep that idea for the wood shop trailer though.
Now as for the truck itself, I've had a few ideas long before I ever bought it and that's where the title of the thread comes from. "BHTRV", Buoyant Half-Track Recreational Vehicle. I wanted it buoyant because of certain roads in the US that require ferry crossings and also because of the Darien Gap in Panama, but it will NOT be a full-time useage. The rear of the truck would be easy to keep buoyant...however the front will be a real engineering challenge. Before I had real weights to work with, yes I already stopped and got on the truck scales before I installed the cargo bed, I used the tare weight of an ISO and what I thought the weight of the truck might be. Of course I was way off for the trucks weights (front/rear), but nothing that would make it impossible. The water line for the ISO alone would be about 7.5in above the floor. I say floor and not the very bottom because I will be welding up and sealing the bottom where the ribs are for water storage, clean grey and black. The front weight of the truck was the only weight that was remotely close. I had figured 11k (true weight being 9840), which would require about 183ft^3 of air to make buoyant. I had thought of 55g drums, but that is impractical as that would require 25 drums. As for the rear I had figured (incorrectly) that the tandem weight would be about 28k (true weight being 9560), this would've put the water line at just under 3'. There are ideas for reducing the water line and increasing stability, but that is for later since the front really needs more work and consideration.
The next part should be self-explanatory, the half track part is for the rear wheels only and only for mud or snow. I think that wheel articulation for rock crawling will be too much for any add-on half-track setup that I come up with. Mind you the half track part (just like the buoyant part) is only as needed and NOT full-time. I have seen several roads in South and Central America (via YouTube) that would make even me nervous. So I figured that I would rather have a standby tire add-on setup to turn it into a half-track rather than be stuck out in the middle of nowhere where no one usually travels, and still not find anyone that would be able to recover this big beast. This will most likely be comprised of heavy chain and angle iron, but that may change. Of course, I missed having my truck during a really soggy winter for our area to test out the rear tire abilities during heavy mud/snow operations. My next chance probably won't be until our monsoon season, or next year at the latest.
Purchasing the truck was the very first part of this goal, now the next part is purchasing a 20' ISO container. I will be buying some heavy steel first to build a frame that will connect the ISO to the truck chassis. If I had a 20' ISO on hand to make measurements and test fit the frame it would be great, but then I would have no of lifting the ISO to put it on the truck. SketchUp has some drawings of them, but I just don't trust someone else's measurements to build for something unseen. I do have someone local that could bring in an ISO for a lot of $$$, and he has some sitting in town so I might try to see if he'll let me mock up a frame using one of his. It would be nice to be able to pick out a one tripper myself at the ports, but I just don't know if that will be cost effective yet considering I'll take the truck to get it and as of right now she only gets 6.5mpg.
Anyways, that's enough rambling on for me, if y'all have any ideas or suggestions I'm all ears. This project will be a long going one since I live on my meager military/VA pension.