A long bank holiday weekend saw both the floor and bed go in.

After work Thursday I was supposed to be meeting a van and man at the local timber yard to deliver a sheet of marine ply, only to find the place shut at 4 (assume they clocked off early for the bank holiday). Feeling a bit deflated I drove home and remembered Sydenhams is right next to my office, so swung in. Convinced the ply wouldn’t fit in my van (hence the man and van being my original plan), however it slid right through the rear hatch with ease:

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Onto Friday and Saturday and we got the closed cell underlay trimmed down and fitted:

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Plywood cut to size, sanded and sealed:

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One large piece to cover the majority of the floor:

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Followed by two smaller pieces towards the rear:

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To avoid flexing around the joint I fitted a strip of ply underneath the floor and screwed all 3 pieces to it:

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Sunday saw the rest of the cargo area carpet go in.

Stripping the old quarter panels of carpet:

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Fitting the new carpet:

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And all panels and bulkhead carpeted:

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Since getting the van back on the road last month I’ve slowed down a huge amount with getting bits done on it. I’ve just been enjoying driving it again and having my evenings back. I definitely needed it, but at the same time it’s been a bit of a shock to the system to be honest; feeling a bit lost most evenings. I found this picture from this time last year which just shows how much I got done over 12 months, from a welded up rolling shell to road worthy:

I have however started making some progress on the interior.

Realised I’d forgotten to connect the cold air drain hose. A washing machine pipe from Wickes was the perfect fit:

Got the bed boards and foam in so we can at least sleep in the van:

Made up some membranes for the cab doors to keep the water out:

Fitted the madmatz carpet set to the cab area. I’ve left the cab carpet and kick panels for now as I’m waiting for it to rain again to see if I’ve fixed the leaky windscreen before putting them in:

And I think we’re decided on the fabrics we’ll be using on the upholstry:

Im hoping to start the upholstery next month.

7 years ago we bought an old VW camper. Don’t think I’d done so much as change a car tire.

3.5 years ago we decided to take it off road to complete a much needed full restoration.
I can’t begin to describe the amount of time, effort, patience and money it’s taken to get to this point. My van related posts from the last few years give a bit of an indication of what it’s taken.

Today that 47 year old little camper passed its MOT! I’m super proud of what we’ve achieved.

Thank you Max, for putting up with an eternity of me coming home late at night covered in rust, grease and paint. For keeping me sane, not many others would. For keeping the lights on and our lives moving while I put everything else on hold.

Adventure awaits.

Rear bumper mounted with stainless fittings:

Front panel cut and polished:

Spent a few hours wiring up the hella spotlamps. The relay plugged nicely into the bottom of the fuse board, I fitted super seal connections to the lamps to make them easier to take on and off. They’re wired to come on when the main full beam headlights come on:

Front bumper and wheel mount bolted onto the front panel:

I tarted up the rear of the indicators as someone in the past had painted the van with them in and filled them with overspray. A few coats of silver made them look much nicer:

And front panel all built up. I absolutely love the way this has turned out!

Hopefully driving through the new forest at night won’t be quite so terrifying now!

Both rear pieces of glass back in tonight with a huge hand from Max. These are quite simply horrible to fit.

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 More cutting and polishing this week, cab doors this time.

Both cab doors rehung on the van, and all built up with new handles and mirrors (you can just see the new wheels on too, love how these look):

I’ve started cavity waxing the life out of everything to try and preserve my work. Bumpers and track covers:

Rear valance and rear chassis leg sections cavity waxed and bunged up:

The van has always had a small engine oil leak which I assumed was just part of the old van charm. However with the engine back in the leak was now more than I was comfortable with (I should’ve addressed this years ago really!). The leak was coming from the front of the engine so I highly suspected it was the front oil seal.

So it was back out with the engine:

My mate Wayne came down to give me a hand as taking the engine out solo is a bit of a job. I didn’t get any pictures of the oil seal, but it was a rubbish silicone seal which was leaking a large amount of oil. We replaced the seal, the o-ring and the clutch (the old one was soaked in oil, no idea how it was still working!):

While the engine was out I also changed the faulty alternator for a new one. Engine all back in:

The engine now runs without a whiff of an oil leak, and the alternator is successfully charging the battery! I’ve also swapped out the 009 dizzy since this picture for the SVDA.

I’ve re-taxed the van and declared it MOT exempt for now. It’ll be getting an MOT for peace of mind though.

A stack of Hankook RA18s ready to go on. I want to underbody wax the arches while the wheels are off first though.

One of the risks of doing all the paint myself is not quite getting it right the first time round. I sprayed the front panel far too dry when clear coating it, so when I came to cut and polish it I broke through to the base coat.

Flatted back and all masked up:

3 coats of clear later:

Much better:

I’ve already painted the sliding door two times already, but it still didn’t look right. I’d corrected some pinholes the second time, but not done a very good job of blending the repair into the paint, when flatted back you can see the section that sat a bit high:

So I flatted the whole panel and shot the base coat on, only to realise I’d not got all the clear off the panel causing it to bubble up horribly! 🙁 I went home at this point as I’d had enough of it, and felt pretty low.

Back down this morning and I made damn sure I had all of the clear off the panel:

And finally happy with the door. Third times a charm!

Finally got a video of the van running under her own steam too. So satisfying!

A lovely sunny day today so base and clear coated the bumpers, wheels and track covers in pastel white:

Sorted the running issues with the engine too. Turned out to be an air leak on the N/S inlet manifold flange due to a poorly pressed gasket (old right, new left). 

Fitted a new one and the engine now runs great. Drove the van for the first time around the yard, and reversed it into the workshop. Felt surreal driving it for the first time in a long while! I’ll grab a video tomorrow of it driving.

Painted a few small bits last weekend.

New master brake cylinder to replace the old one which had a split rubber cup:

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Front belly pan and propex heater mount while I had the gun out:

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With the cylinder fitted I bled all the brakes and adjusted the parking brake so we now have working brakes. Having the right tools for the job makes it all so much easier. I bought a one man vacuum bleed kit which came with this little fill bottle that has a little valve to top up the reservoir. No more carefully trying to avoid spilling it.

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The rest of the week has been spent trying to get my engine to run properly, including cleaning and rebuilding the carb, refitting the old dizzy and ht leads and a lot of arsing about. I’ve now isolated this to an air leak in the flange between inlet manifold and cylinder head. New gaskets on their way to replace this and hopefully we’ll be running properly.