Pete & Teri’s Next Big Adventure

From Brooklyn to the Mountains



Archive for February, 2006

Progress!

Sunday, February 26th, 2006

New wires and plugs enabled me to pass emissions – hooray!

Found some velour fabric ($23 for 8 yards!) at a nearby shop to recover the z-bed. It worked out well enough for a first try, but there are a couple of wrinkles. Fabric won’t slide against foam, so no matter how hard you pull up the edge when you’re stapling it to the back, it’s not taut enough. I’ll invent something to help when I decide on permanant color scheme and re-cover the cushions.

The rear cushion will be in 2 sections, on wooden rails to raise them to the height of the front portion and allowing storage of flat objects beneath them.

The sink unit will be removable. I used an extra seat belt with slightly modified mounts and added it to the passenger seat belt mount points:

Sigh…life gets in the way of messing around with VWs

Wednesday, February 22nd, 2006

30 degree weather, no garage, and little spare time…yuck. Had to drop the Vanagon off with a mechanic to a) see what can be done to get a passing emissions test and b) keep it off the street till that happens. I’ve been to the guy before with “normal” (read: American) cars and he’s great, but since he’s not a VW specialist I’m sure I’ll be paying some extra labor while he figures out this strange machine I’ve saddled him with.

Some day, I’ll live in a place with a garage or driveway. In the meantime, I’ve got the z-bed mounted:

More blizzard

Sunday, February 12th, 2006

Took a drive, easily riding through a foot of snow and two foot drifts thanks to German engineering. Went to Home Labyrinth, did a few donuts in the abandoned upper parking lot (couldn’t resist), and picked up some lumber.

Started making the sink cabinet, which will go behind the passenger seat, 1960s Westy style (and which will quick-disconnect so I don’t have to drive it around all the time)

Also ordered foam rubber to rebuild the z-bed, so I just need to find some fabric. I’ll probably cheap out and butcher some batik wall hangings for now.

My bedroom today

Blizzard!

Sunday, February 12th, 2006

I can’t wait to see if the Vanagon is as capable in the snow as my ’76 Westy was. On a trip upstate in a blizzard years ago, we made a game of counting the abandoned 4WD SUVs on the side of the road.
Snowstorm 2006-02-12

Just in time for the blizzard!

Saturday, February 11th, 2006

Pulled all the rear panels today and insulated with the foil-wrapped bubble wrap stuff. You don’t want to use fiberglass or that cool foam in a can stuff because they both trap moisture and hold it against the metal. Even the bubble wrap requires care – front doors need to be able to drain water that gets in around the window, so they’re best left alone unless you fully understand the drainage/vapor barrier setup in there (I don’t yet).

The insulation was great to work with. You measure the spaces, mark material with sharpie, cut it with a plain old scissors, spray some adhesive on the back of it and on the mounting surface, and stick it on. Once the glue is dry (5 mins), use impermeable pressure-sensitive tape to seal the joints and edges so you don’t create water traps. I don’t know how you’d do this in a humid climate, but it was easy here in the dry winter.

After all the walls were insulated, I popped the panels back on and turned to the evil Vanagon rear heater of death from hell.

HOW I REPLACED THE EVIL VANAGON REAR HEATER (WITH A REBUILT EVIL VRH)

C-clamped the two hoses coming through the firewall to seal them off, loosened the hose clamps holding them to the heater, pulled them loose (a little drippy, have paper towels handy).

Unscrewed heater from the floor, unplugged the wiring harness, and turned it hose side up so it wouldn’t gush. Brought it inside and exchanged it for the rebuilt one.

Collected hoses to new heater (but kept them clamped off – important!). Made sure valve on heater was open and used a small funnel to pour coolant into the heater through the bleeder valve hole. Tapped, tilted, pinched hoses, and worked the shutoff valve back and forth, adding coolant until I was satisfied there was no air in the heater.

Lifted heater up a bit, so that any remaining air would rise to the bleeder valve from the hoses, and removed the c-clamps. It took a tiny bit more coolant. Screwed it back down to the floor and wiped it off so it would be easier to see if this worked or not. Closed the valve on the side of the rear heater.

Started the van and ran the engine till warm, then slowly opened the valve allowing hot coolant to flow through the heater…no leaks so far! Turned on the rear heater fan and it works GREAT! It’s almost too effective; the front heater was noticably cooler with the rear one going.

It was about 30 degrees out, and together they warmed the car completely almost immediately…and it seemed to hold the heat longer with the new insulation.

Also, I replaced a couple of door locks so there’s some way in other than climbing through the rear hatch. That’ll be nice!

While I was doing all this, the Mr Heater Portable Buddy kept me nice and toasty, running on low maybe 1/4 of the time with the sliding door opened a crack for air. I spent hours out there and the 1 lb propane tank still feels pretty full.

Replacing Westy louvered window screen

Thursday, February 9th, 2006

Didn’t have time to visit the glass guys today to have the window installed, so I satisfied myself with replacing the screen. It was easy, just like a house window screen.