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zmotorsports's avatar
zmotorsports
Explorer
Jan 30, 2014

Our Past RV's

There was a thread started by another forum member a few weeks ago discussing older coach remodels/modifications and I didn't have any digital pictures of our past rigs. Last night I had my son scan some pictures of our past RVs and decided to start a new thread rather than dilute the other thread. My wife and I were blessed and started camping and then RVing early in our married life. When our son came along he just accepted it as normal because he didn't know any different right from birth. He has always traveled by way of some form of RV and all of our family activities have revolved around enjoying the outdoors and some form of motorsports. My wife and I didn't come from families that did this but we learned quick.:laugh: We perform and have performed ALL of our own repairs, modifications and upgrades which I find almost as fun as using our RV's.

I know technically not a motorhome but this was our first RV. We bought the 1988 Ford F250 after my wife and I were married. The truck was totaled and I rebuilt it in 1991 just after purchasing our new home. In 1992 we bought our first RV, a 10 1/2' Northland camper with the lengthwise queen bed over the cab. It was a 1990 model and I did some work for a guy who owned a car lot who took it in on trade and didn't want to deal with a camper. I traded some work on various cars on his lot for the camper. We agreed on a $3500.00 price so I worked off that much in parts and labor for him. Turned out to be a great deal and a great friendship emerged.

The camper was in immaculate condition with very little use. However, the brown/beige two tone stripes on the exterior had to go. I had some leftover paint from when I rebuilt the truck so I color matched to camper to the truck.

Here is a picture of just after painting the camper and loading it for its' maiden voyage.


First trip out with the new setup, wife's family reunion. Needless to say although a small RV, we were hooked.


By the following year I had also purchased a wrecked 24' enclosed trailer to haul our toys to the sand dunes. I needed some extra carrying capacity so I converted the F250 to a dually and painted to match. I also had to fabricate an extended hitch to tie into the frame of the truck in which could handle the tongue weight of an enclosed trailer full of sand toys.

Washed up in the driveway before heading out. Sorry, I don't have any pictures of the trailer hooked up to the truck/camper in my photo album. Stupid me, it was quite a sight.


We owned the truck camper for several years and thoroughly enjoyed it, although it was small, even for a family of three. We didn't travel long distance with it as we mainly used it for weekend getaways and sand duning but it fit our budget at the time. We enjoyed listening to my aunt/uncles stories about traveling in their motorhome (1976 FMC) and thought maybe someday. We went snowmobiling with them one weekend and the motorhome bug bit us and bit us hard. We immediately went into save mode to acquire a motorhome.

In 1995 we fell into a great deal on a 1984 30' Travelcraft on the GM P30 chassis. The gentleman we bought it from belonged to my aunt/uncles' motorhome club and he had lost his wife about three years prior and the Travelcraft had just sat. It had been neglected and was in desperate need of some TLC. Friends thought we were nuts due to its age but it had character and was extremely well built despite its' age. It was really ahead of its' time, it had the larger 6500 watt Onan genset, one piece fiberglass roof, water tank up inside the closet (heated), blender built into the counter and a very luxurious looking wine cabinet, not that the wife and I drank but it looked cool and high tech. He made us a good deal and we commenced on remodeling/modifying the coach to suit us and off we went on our journey.

I went through the coach bumper to bumper and got it current on all maintenance related issues such as all fluids, filters, replaced tires and fixed the many little things that needed attention. I also did some transmission upgrades, Doug Thorley Tri-Y headers, full tune-up including re-curving the distributor and rebuilding and fine tuning the carburetor. We drove the coach for a full season and fell in love with it, prior to the second RV season starting I promised the wife I would do some cosmetic upgrades to brighten it up and bring it more current. The sidewalls were holding up very well as they were aluminum skinned and painted with automotive paint. The endcaps however, were gelcoat and no matter how much I buffed them, they would die back and loose their gloss. The bottom section also had some bumps and bruises that needed attention.

I painted both endcaps and the bottom section with PPG basecoat/clearcoat urethane and it turned out great. Much easier to keep looking good. I also installed a Gear Vendors Overdrive unit for the second season and after driving it I realized that should have been one of the first modifications done. It made highway driving so much more enjoyable. We met some people who we started taking extended road trips with and this was the start of our long distance RVing. We traveled around most of the western U.S. and parts of Canada with this coach and either towing our 24' enclosed trailer or flat towing our Jeep Cherokee until 2000 when we sold it and upgraded to our first DP.

Here are some pictures of our Travelcraft undergoing its' external remodel/refresh. Sanded and getting ready for paint.










I was able to match the maroon color pretty good but I couldn't match the gold strip so I ended up repainting the gold all the way around as well as the bottom section which was faded to more of a "pinkish" than a maroon by now.






Bottom section. I even painted the generator door to tie it all in with the bottom.


Buffed/polished and reassembled. Almost ready to hit the road.






The wife and I then decided to tackle the interior. Out with the dark maroon and woven wood shades.


In with the newly upholstered interior and vertical 3" blinds. I had an upholsterer who had done several street rods/customs for us over the years and he was very adamant that he does not work on RV's but he agreed to recover the furniture if I were to remove it and bring it to him and not tell anyone. He also covered the valances over the blind tracks that I fabricated from wood.




Continued into our next coach, 1991 Beaver Contessa, immediately following.

Mike.
  • I love the Travelcraft, great job!

    I like to see older RV's maintained and restored. They have much more character then the newer units.

    Keep up the good work and thanks for sharing.
  • Mike,
    As you know, a good paint job is all prep and that is where the hours and costs add up for a quality paint job. I hate it when I hear of someone jumping on a cheap price for the motor home and then raving about how good it looks. They ALL look good right after they are done. The proof is how they will look 2,5 or 10 years down the road, or long after your check has cleared.
    If more people did the prep and then either sprayed it themselves, or paid someone else to do the spray work, they could end up with a great paint job and still end up shelling out less money than a South of the border quicky.
    Congrats on tackling the jobs yourself. The quality shows and it leaves more money in your pocket for toys. ;)
  • rgatijnet1 wrote:
    Excellent work.
    Several people have asked on here about having their motor homes painted. The cost is always too high and I have suggested doing it themselves, if they are physically able. I was not a painter by trade but I self taught myself enough to paint several show winning Classic cars, a couple of airplanes, a motor home, and a couple of boats.
    I see nothing on your profile to suggest that you were a painter by trade so I have to assume that you just bought the equipment and paint and did it. If that is the case, please explain the pitfalls/rewards of doing it yourself as well as the financial advantages.


    Thanks guys for your compliments. I appreciate it.

    rgatijnet, I like you am self taught because I had a need at the time and couldn't afford to have someone else do the paint body work on my personal vehicles. Mechanically, I felt very confident from an early age and was/is how I make my living.

    To be honest, aside from cost was the fact that many of the paint jobs that I saw being done were "rush" jobs that shops just wanted in and our. The quality of work that I wanted done by using the proper supplies was definitely something I couldn't afford so I learned to do it myself. I figured that the only way I was going to be happy with the quality of the job done was to do it myself. And as my wife puts it, if I am still not happy there is noone else to blame but myself.:)

    I to have built some street rods and customs and have been fortunate to have several of them published/featured in magazines such as Street Rodder, Popular Hot Rodding and Sand Sports.

    In all I have been very blessed with the skills and abilities that I have acquired and fine tuned. When my wife and I were dating she knew I was heavy into racing, cars, trucks, motorcycles and pretty much any thing with an engine. I told her one of my pet peeves was seeing a similar vehicle in a parking lot. I told her I wanted our stuff to stand out from the crowd.

    As far as pitfalls with painting it is having a place to do the work. It is very dirty work and I hate doing it in my yard but don't really have a choice. It also seems like with paint supplies the cost keeps rising faster and faster making it to where the home hobbiest is almost priced out of doing it. It is still worth it in the long run cost wise but the size of the project makes it hard to find a place to perform the work.

    Mike.
  • In 2000 my wife and I decided it was time to upgrade. Some friends whom we traveled with somewhat had just bought a 1998 model gas motorhome and thought we were nuts when we told them we were looking at an older diesel pusher. I tried to explain that I was looking more at the chassis, engine and coach that would be better suited to towing the weight we were towing in our enclosed trailer as well as the overall ride quality and braking that the larger diesel chassis provide. They didn't understand but in the end it was our money not theirs.

    My local dealer called us one day as he had taken in a 38' Beaver Contessa that was in need of some attention and knew we were looking and was very impressed with the work we had done on our previous coach. My wife and I struck a deal on a new to us 1991 Beaver Contessa with the 3208 CAT/four-speed Allison with 64k on the odometer.

    We got it home and commenced tearing into this coach. We again started with the mechanical integrity and seeing as though we got no records in the deal completely went through it bumper to bumper bringing all of the service and repairs current. I then couldn't stand the peeling clearcoat on the rear end cap and the rock chips on the front endcap. I also didn't like the textured, dull paint that Beaver used on the bumpers so I decided to remedy that as well. Multiple compartment doors were scratched/dinged and the water heater door had almost all of the paint peeling off of it from improper prepwork.

    While I worked on the exterior and mechanics, my wife tackled the interior, scrubbing, shampooing the carpet, oiling the beautiful Beaver woodwork and basically bringing it up to our standards.

    Our previous coach I was able to paint at my parents farm but this coach was too large to get under power lines and into the driveway so I decided to tackle this in small sections at home in the backyard outside our shop.

    Here is the coach backed up to the shop door and getting prepped for paint work. If you look closely you can see the large spots where the clearcoat is peeling off.


    Fixing the section under the rear bumper that was damaged.


    Masked and ready to go.


    Painted and cleared. Ready to unmask.


    Rear bumper smoothed and texture removed prior to paint/clearcoat. Looks much better.


    Water heater access door beadblasted, epoxy primed, painted and clearcoated.


    The 7500 watt Onan generator was an absolute mess. Oil was leaking from everywhere and the foil insulation was torn to hell and very little remained. I thought it would be easier to remove the generator completely from the coach to work on as well as scrape all of the old foil insulation off the generator compartment. While it was out, I pressure washed, replaced many seals and repainted the generator prior to reinstallation.


    Completed and parked in the driveway ready for use. The first half of the first season was spend bringing her back to life, then we could start enjoying her.


    I also spent quite a lot of time bringing the polished stainless steel radiator grille back to life.




    Rest area on one of our many trips up to Montana over the years flat towing our 1996 Grand Cherokee.


    One of our many snowmobiling trips over the years.


    Parked at the Las Vegas Motorcoach Resort on one of our NHRA drag racing trips. We actually had to send the campground pictures of our coach before they would reserve us a spot due to its age.


    We absolutely loved this coach. We owned it for approx. seven years and put just over 65k miles on her. When we sold the coach in early 2007 it had 129k on the odometer and looked like it just rolled out of the factory. We got a lot of comments on the coach when we camped as people couldn't believe the year and mileage on her. I hope our current coach ages as well as that Beaver coach did.

    Mike.
  • Excellent work.
    Several people have asked on here about having their motor homes painted. The cost is always too high and I have suggested doing it themselves, if they are physically able. I was not a painter by trade but I self taught myself enough to paint several show winning Classic cars, a couple of airplanes, a motor home, and a couple of boats.
    I see nothing on your profile to suggest that you were a painter by trade so I have to assume that you just bought the equipment and paint and did it. If that is the case, please explain the pitfalls/rewards of doing it yourself as well as the financial advantages.
  • Excellent post Mike, thanks!
    The exterior work on the travelcraft is amazing!