Excellent location for the readily available from inside or outside toolbox.I put a toolbox under the dinette. I had this mjddle one and it fit prefectly, but then i was out of storage space, so i bought a 56" Harbor Freight one to replace it. Fair swap i think!
Now i have to fix the upholstery!
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Yes 56 inches wide, almost as tall as me!Excellent location for the readily available from inside or outside toolbox.
56"...?![]()
I had to reread your original post again. I'd thought you meant you put a 56" toolbox under the dinette bench. That of course sounded preposterous. Reading more carefully, I see you installed a box you already had into the RV, which left you short on storage space in the shop, so you then replaced that toolbox with a new 56" box for the shop?Yes 56 inches wide, almost as tall as me!
Oh Yes, the shop get the HUGE 56" one!I had to reread your original post again. I'd thought you meant you put a 56" toolbox under the dinette bench. That of course sounded preposterous. Reading more carefully, I see you installed a box you already had into the RV, which left you short on storage space in the shop, so you then replaced that toolbox with a new 56" box for the shop?
So that leaves me wondering, where did the toolbox in the RV come from? What were its dimensions? As you say, it is hard to find any that aren't way too wide.
I found some "under desk drawers" that are similar and convenient to mount, but they're only 16" wide. I've considered two sets, but I'm not sure how much room there is to work with.
Oh Yes, the shop get the HUGE 56" one!
The under dinette piece is an old US General middle drawer unit. they don't make it anymore. Everything they make now is way too big. The under dinette one is 26" wide x 8" tall and 13" deep(??). you might find a used one on craigs list or something.
I was about to make my own until I realized I had the perfect solution right in my shop.
I Did find some premade drawers on Amazon

Wow, good WorkReplaced the old Onan 6k fuel pump and got the generator running again. Primed the pump and got it to fire up on the first try. Theres an exhaust leak where the replacement stainless pipe connects to the Onan exhaust manifold that I have to address. Im also pretty sure the front seal is leaking so will put that on the to-do list as well in the near future.
Since the generator was running, I was finally able to test the Gree 15K AC/HP we installed a while back. Worked great and the ducted design pushed air all the way forward and all the way back. On high, it was very quiet compared to the old duo-therm. Will install another one in the rear at some point as I plan on removing the old furnace. If I need heat, it will be heat pump(s), or a small stand alone.
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This is a much closer view of how the gas struts are installed.
The struts are fastened to the reinforcing flanges to provide a secure attachment.
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Is this how you are working on the generator?



I have never seen a gas strut installation that hadn't failed and been repaired, or was showing signs of failure.Has anyone else ever experienced a similar gas strut installation failure?
I don't believe there are any glass fibers in Sheet Molded Compound (SMC). At least I have never seen any in any breaks.There doesn't appear to be any glass in the fins. The area was certainly pounded violently many times.
I was just thinking this. As long of a length as possible along that inside flange and use a combo of rivets and epoxy to mount it.that little flange is way too weak to mount a strut to. You need to use a chunk o aluminum angle to reinforce it. the longer the better. use the aluminum angle to support the weight of the door. you can mount it to the flange as long as the flange isn't structural
It's full of chopped glass fiber. I don't think it's as heavily loaded as a typical chopped fiberglass layup, but it's in there. I've roughed up my hands on it enough times.I don't believe there are any glass fibers in Sheet Molded Compound (SMC). At least I have never seen any in any breaks.