| Sat
22 Dec
Peter is preparing to erect the awning over the wash
bay on the side of the shed. This requires the fabrication
and welding of brackets up at roof level.

Sun
23 Dec
With help from two other friends and the 20-tonne
excavator we spend most of the day erecting the awning.

The excavator working as a crane.
Now
that it's done we can sleep outside where we prefer.
For the past few weeks we've been sleeping in the
shed because it seems to constantly rain and the Cruiser
leaks a bit.
Now
there's a roof over the wash bay we have the best
of both worlds, outdoor living with some protection
from the heavy rain.
Mon
24 Dec
Yesterday the excavator filled the role of crane,
today it's working as an aerial platform while Peter
fixes the overhead crane.

Peter fixes the overhead crane while
standing in the excavator's bucket.
Meanwhile
we're installing the ducting for the diesel heater.

The heater ducting.
Over
the past week or so we've been fitting out the kitchen
area with cupboards, shelves etc. It's been pretty
fiddly work.
Chris
uses a gadget called a Dreampot (www.dreampot.com.au)
to do much of our cooking. Dreampots are really just
insulated containers into which you place another
container of hot water and raw food, wait an hour
or so, and remove cold water and cooked food.
Our
Dreampot saves a heck of a lot of gas and so deserves
to be specially accommodated. Because you have to
lift the relatively heavy internal container from
the burner then place it inside the outer part I've
built a small swiveling platform under the cook top
so Chris can easily move the hot food to/from the
Dreampot. When done it stores back under the bench.

Chris's dreampot has its own swing-out
platform under the kitchen bench, this will make it
easy for her to move the internal pot to and from
the cook top
Most
sinks have an awkward space under them that is difficult
to use effectively. It's L-shaped and therefore doesn't
lend itself to any normal storage solutions. We thought
about it for some time then got the idea to use one
of those toolboxes with the cantilevering shelves.
We
buy a cheapy, remove the two left hand shelves, and
mount what remains on some drawer runners under the
sink.
The
result is an L-shaped sliding drawer for all Chris's
cooking utensils.

The L-shaped area under the sink with
modified toolkit storage.

Here's the toolkit slid out with the
two cantilevering shelves open.
That
leaves the toolbox's other two shelves. We have a
small spot next to the "day fridge", and
we also have a requirement for a slide out cutlery
drawer. It's a match made in heaven.

The remaining part of the toolbox slides
out from beside the small day fridge.
So
what's the "day fridge"? We've had an Indel
drawer fridge in the Cruiser for some time, it's proven
to be very good and we don't want to leave it behind.
Also, when opening a normal upright fridge 25 times
during the day you lose all your cold air, so we decided
to install the Indel and use it for stuff you access
during the day, cold drinks, milk, sandwich filling
etc. That's it with the black front in the above photo.
Then
there's the mangle. Despite several attempts by me
over the years to get Chris to buy a small normal-type
washing machine she's happy with the bucket-and-impeller
one we have and a mangle to wring the clothes out.
Many
motorhomers have mangles and when we first decided
to get one I did the rounds of the antique and second
hand shops. "No chance" I was told. Then
one day at the markets where I was selling my photos
I spotted it, our mangle, made in the 50s but never
used and still in the box with grease-paper wrapping.
What
a find, and only $60.
It's
the style that used to clamp on the divide on those
old concrete dual wash tubs, so I don't even have
to modify it, just mount it somehow.
In
Wothahellizat 1 the mangle slid out from under the
kitchen bench, but this time it will be stored in
the wall behind the bench and swing out on hinges.

The mangle in its stored location.

And swung out over the kitchen sink.
It
seems to work well although we can't try it for real
yet. Some of the paintwork is a little tired, maybe
it's due for a reno.
Mon
24 Dec
More internal fit out. We've built the door that leads
into the cab and installed the cab-to-body gusset
(the fabric bit that connects the two).
On
the back of the door hangs the small step ladder that
we will use to access the bedroom.

Wed
26 Dec
And now for something really important...beer.
For
months now I've been agonizing over how to store my
beer bottles, and I've finally come up with a solution.
I've already built the slide out compartment, I just
need a method of storing as many bottles as possible
without them falling over.
Solution,
closed-cell foam rubber, with holes cut to take the
bottle bases.

At $60 for a square of 25mm foam rubber
I'll make a prototype for testing from an old piece.

It seems to work so we mark out the
real thing and half-cut the holes with a 70mm hole
saw.

I'm happy with the spacing so complete
the cuts. Given the amount of material left we sure
paid dearly for the foam, I wonder if they'll give
me a refund on the offcuts.

And here is the finished product, 65
bottles stored nice and snug. There will be a lid
on the compartment that will hold the tops in place.


And because I'm a photographer I have
to shoot a couple of abstracts.
Sun
30 Dec
We had an air conditioner in Wothahellizat 1 and never
used it, but it make sense to keep it I think and
so I installed the unit some time ago.
Now
I have to look into the ducting.
The
A/C has three outlets and it's normal to connect three
flexible ducts to these and route them throughout
the house, but I don't have room for that.

The
three outlets (the black duct is from the heater).
What
I do have is a 60mm wall cavity, so it seems reasonable
to force the air through that cavity to get it up
near the ceiling where I do have room for some proper
ducting.
To
do this I have to build a box to redirect the air
from outlets and force it into the wall cavity.

Here the ducts are covered with my
newly-made box, the air will exit through the opening
at the top of the box. I'm getting quite good at this
tin folding.
The
cavity also has to house some power points and my
original plan was to just let the air waft up past
the wiring, but I decided to channel the air properly
and so partition the wall cavity.

The wall cavity with the A/C at the
bottom and my ducting to channel the air up to the
proper ducts at the top. The six rectangular cutouts
are for power points and the stuff on the left is
the pantry. Mouse over the photo to highlight the
duct.

Here's
a closer view, of course this will all be boxed in
by the wall cladding. The square white, and round
silver, ducts carry the cold air to the kitchen and
the other end of the lounge room. You can just see
one of the lounge room outlets at the extreme right
of the photo (the rectangle cut into the white duct).
For
ducting I've used a couple of metres of the original
flexible duct I bought with the A/C all those years
ago and never used. That should handle the air emitting
from one of the A/C outlets and direct it to the kitchen.
However that's not enough, so I've also used some
plastic down pipe (normally used on gutters) with
an area roughly equal to the other two outlets to
send air into the lounge room.
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