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Joining the Amerigo Clan - End of the KIT's Road

JoeChiOhki
Explorer II
Explorer II
Sunday, May 31, 2015




A tale of Two Truck Campers - End of the KIT's road


Well, life is an interesting thing, and in this case, a rare find plopped into my lap not too long ago when I put up a Craigslist ad looking for Amerigo parts for my planned rebuild.

In this case, it came in the form of a 1975 Amerigo 11'6" Snap-N-Nap up in Puyallup, WA, and no the silver Dodge its sitting on is not mine ;).

The current owner has had it for roughly sixteen years, and has done several modifications to it already, including updating the power panel in the unit to a modern one, adding electric jacks to the front and building some very nicely done steel corner brackets that bolt both through the corner and sandwich with a steel plate on the inside as well as bolting through under the wing.

The camper has spent all of its downtime under a carport cover so that it has stayed out of the bulk of the Northwestโ€™s weather, and hasnโ€™t been used in the last several years as the her current owners have upgraded to a GMC Kodiak and a custom made Chalet Truck Camper.

The similarity of this tale to how the KIT was when I first found her is not lost on me.


Having made the trip to give it a good inspection, Dawn and I decided that weโ€™d be able to get what we wanted in our remodel of the KIT by simply buying the Amerigo (ironically for the same amount as what we bought the KIT for nine years ago ๐Ÿ™‚ ), and restoring it.

Fortunately, the current owner is willing to hold onto it for us for a couple more months whilst we raise the funds really quick to make the purchase, as our savings was run down with a recent batch of dental surgery I had to undergo.

One of the first things I noticed is that he added a nice center aisle sky-light. In most Amerigos, thereโ€™s a vent roughly where the forward end of the skylight is, and thatโ€™s where the A/C unit is installed.

Weโ€™ll likely end up adding a second opening between the vent in the rear and the skylight to allow for the installation of a standard roof-top A/C unit, as the current owner has already upgraded the wiring in the unit to 30amp service, with a very nice marine twist lock plug.

Space-wise, in terms of floor space, the KIT and the Amerigo are fairly similar, the big differences being the floor plan and the fact that the Amerigo has a rear snap-n-nap, which adds a third bed (full size), oh and the two piece clamshell solid fiberglass bathroom that has a toilet that I can actually SIT ON without having to make major renovations, my one big beef with the KIT, I could never truly dry camp because I couldnโ€™t comfortably sit on the john because the bathroom was too small.

One of the first things we plan to do is shift and/or shorten the dinette by about 4-5โ€, so we can extend the cabover bed back a little ways to allow it to fit a full queen size mattress (the mattress platform is 4โ€™6 1/2โ€ wide). The fridge compartment door will still be perfectly aligned, as the inner wall paneling actually over laps it by a good 3-4โ€.

The KITโ€™s bed actually already does this, so weโ€™ll simply be recreating some more of the KITโ€™s floor plan.

The lower kitchen cabinets and probably the upper cabinets as well will be modified (and possibly refaced with kreg-joined solid oak pieces, similar to our Bighornโ€™s Kitchen).

The current owner has refaced a good part of the camper, which is why you see all the nice oak grain, the original wall paneling is the classic dark 70s wall board you commonly find in most similar era truck campers.

The yellow wallboard tacked over the top of the original wall paneling as a back splash for the kitchen is also going, and the range will likely be swapped out for the one in the KIT, as while its stainless steel like the range hood, its also fairly rusty inside, though the gas valves may prove to be useful.

The furnace is original, itโ€™s a very early NT series style Suburban furnace, and is pilot lit, instead of electric spark ignition like modern units. The fact that it still looks brand new tells me this camper really never saw any winter use. Weโ€™ll either replace it with the KITโ€™s furnace, or if thereโ€™s funds enough, simply buy a new NT Series unit.

All of the plumbing has been redone with properly installed PEX water lines.


The rear snap-n-nap bed is a one piece fiberglass and aluminum framed construction with sprayed in foam insulation (way ahead of its time in 1975). The quilting is made of vinyl or pvc plastic, and I suspect, will get replaced with FRP paneling or possibly wood.

The hinged sides will be taken apart and foam board will be sandwiched into the middle, at which point weโ€™ll reface them with FRP, or take a page from another Amerigo owner and recover them in marine vinyl.

One thing I noticed about the Amerigoโ€™s and love that this one still has (and that Iโ€™ve located the truck side for) is a Phillips Radio Inter-Com system .


I find it to be very amusing that it even came with a circuit diagram for the device itself.


Sadly, the current owner didnโ€™t have the other half, I managed to find the other half that goes in the truck cab for $25 (w/free shipping ๐Ÿ™‚ ) on ebay!


Well, that kind of wraps this up, the true adventure wonโ€™t start till later this summer, once I get the cash together, thatโ€™ll be when the real fun starts ;).
My Blog - The Journey of the Redneck Express

CB

Channel 17

Redneck Express


'1992 Dodge W-250 "Dually" Power Wagon - Club Cab Long Bed 4x4 V8 5.9L gashog w/4.10 Geared axles
'1974 KIT Kamper 1106 - 11' Slide-in
'2006 Heartland BigHorn 3400RL
47 REPLIES 47

Reddog1
Explorer II
Explorer II
I am embarrassed to say, I completely missed this thread. Sorry Joe.

I too had an Amerigo Snap-n-Nap. It was my intent to restore it. It had so much dry rot, I had to gut it. I discovered the fiberglass roof had more pin holes than there are stars in the sky. You could not see them from the outside. I think they main reason for so much dry rot. That was about eleven years ago.

As the world turns, I had a mandatory job change to a different city. Which put a severe limitation on my free time. I stumbled on my Bigfoot TC, that was usable while I did upgrades. I decided to part the Amerigo out. All I have left are photos. I really did like the Amerigo, but circumstances just did not work out.

Wayne


2004.5 Ram SLT LB 3500 DRW Quad Cab 4x4
1988 Bigfoot (C11.5) TC (1900# w/standard equip. per decal), 130 watts solar, 100 AH AGM, Polar Cub A/C, EU2000i Honda

Toad: 91 Zuke

Wagonqueen_Truc
Explorer
Explorer
You go Joe

JoeChiOhki
Explorer II
Explorer II
Half-way there on the camper fund :).
My Blog - The Journey of the Redneck Express

CB

Channel 17

Redneck Express


'1992 Dodge W-250 "Dually" Power Wagon - Club Cab Long Bed 4x4 V8 5.9L gashog w/4.10 Geared axles
'1974 KIT Kamper 1106 - 11' Slide-in
'2006 Heartland BigHorn 3400RL

JoeChiOhki
Explorer II
Explorer II
1971amerigo wrote:
Joe let me know if you need to install a gray water tank.
Campers of this era had only black water tanks and gray water went on the ground.
I have a plan that worked great on this camper.

Bob W.


I do, what is the stock size on the black tank, btw? The current owner used his with a blue tote for the grey water.
My Blog - The Journey of the Redneck Express

CB

Channel 17

Redneck Express


'1992 Dodge W-250 "Dually" Power Wagon - Club Cab Long Bed 4x4 V8 5.9L gashog w/4.10 Geared axles
'1974 KIT Kamper 1106 - 11' Slide-in
'2006 Heartland BigHorn 3400RL

1971amerigo
Explorer
Explorer
Joe let me know if you need to install a gray water tank.
Campers of this era had only black water tanks and gray water went on the ground.
I have a plan that worked great on this camper.

Bob W.

pjay9
Explorer
Explorer
1971...great pics. you have done a nice job...is that a household AC unit I see?
Joe, you are certainly going to have some fun.
2005 Lance 1161, 2004 Dodge CTD 3500 Dually 19.5's Stabiloads Roadmaster Sway, 2009 20' Raider 185 Pro Fish 90hp & 9.9 Yamaha vintage Penn elec.downriggers EZLoad roller trailer

JoeChiOhki
Explorer II
Explorer II
Thanks 71, yours has the same floor plan as the one I'm buying.
Gonna keep my extended seat areas, though as I plan to complete the conversion the current owner did to one of them and make it the battery compartment after I line it and provide the proper venting. He used sealed gel cell batteries, and I'll be reusing my group 31s off the KIT.

I do like how you extended a couple of the cabinets clear to the floor.

I'm also debating completely rebuilding the cabinet over the dinette to make it a U-Style cabinet to squeeze every extra inch of storage out of it.
My Blog - The Journey of the Redneck Express

CB

Channel 17

Redneck Express


'1992 Dodge W-250 "Dually" Power Wagon - Club Cab Long Bed 4x4 V8 5.9L gashog w/4.10 Geared axles
'1974 KIT Kamper 1106 - 11' Slide-in
'2006 Heartland BigHorn 3400RL

1971amerigo
Explorer
Explorer


Oh and here is what the inside looks like

1971amerigo
Explorer
Explorer


Here are a couple of pics of my 1971 Snap & Nap
your gonna love yours when you get it

good luck

Bob w

1971amerigo
Explorer
Explorer

JoeChiOhki
Explorer II
Explorer II
1971amerigo wrote:


Thanks, that looks like a fairly early Amerigo, as there's more aluminum skin on the nose, and it also looks a little shorter....
My Blog - The Journey of the Redneck Express

CB

Channel 17

Redneck Express


'1992 Dodge W-250 "Dually" Power Wagon - Club Cab Long Bed 4x4 V8 5.9L gashog w/4.10 Geared axles
'1974 KIT Kamper 1106 - 11' Slide-in
'2006 Heartland BigHorn 3400RL

1971amerigo
Explorer
Explorer

1971amerigo
Explorer
Explorer

Indy_Bob1
Explorer
Explorer
JoeChiOhki wrote:
Following Wagonqueen's example, I'm strongly tempted to name mine "Serenity", since they named theirs "Enterprise" ๐Ÿ˜‰


A Firefly class TC... that's shiny!
IF YOU DON'T STAND FOR SOMETHING, THEN YOU'LL FALL FOR ANYTHING.
1995 F-350 DRW PSD 5SPD
1972 Coachman 9' Knight
10' SA flatbed trailer to haul the other toys behind
2007 HD FLHTCI
2000 Honda ACE 750
1961 Willys Jeep CJ 5

JoeChiOhki
Explorer II
Explorer II
JumboJet wrote:
If I could modify an Amerigo,I would want to extend the overhead bed area to look like this: (Not good at editing photos!).



Aye, personally, I'd do that first, but the majority of the nose is one piece of fiberglass, and would be a nightmare to modify, so its simply easier to realign the fridge so that its actually lined up with the door on the outside and extend the cabover bed the extra few inches needed to get our current mattresses in.
My Blog - The Journey of the Redneck Express

CB

Channel 17

Redneck Express


'1992 Dodge W-250 "Dually" Power Wagon - Club Cab Long Bed 4x4 V8 5.9L gashog w/4.10 Geared axles
'1974 KIT Kamper 1106 - 11' Slide-in
'2006 Heartland BigHorn 3400RL