Redoing the bedroom

kerry pinkerton

New member
Jul 13, 2012
2,443
0
0
My long suffering wife harasses me about taking on too much. It's now 19 days until we need to be ready to go and the interior is out of the coach.
No pressure though honey. :lol:

In order to put in the new rear windows, the interior plastic end cap has to come off in order to get to the screws to remove the old window and put
in the new ones.

So while I'm waiting on the upholstery shop to do the headliner panels (Tuesday hopefully), I pulled everything out of the rear bedroom. The plastic
panels were nice and yellowed. A bit of new plastic rattle cans did the trick and now they are a nice white and should match the white headliner
nicely.

Getting the back piece out and back in is a challenge but if you turn it upside down, and put one end in the corner by the ladder, the other end WILL
go into the hall with a bit of effort.

http://www.gmcmhphotos.com/photos/new-cabinets-interior-mods/p55759-interior-mods-00003.html

http://www.gmcmhphotos.com/photos/new-cabinets-interior-mods/p55763-interior-mods-00005.html

Really pleased with how it came out and looks. I insulated behind everything while I was at it including the ceiling.

As far as other mods, I was going to have to do something about the drivers side wooden thing under the window. It is particle board and turning to
sawdust. As I looked at it, it became apparent to me that the only reason it existed was to provide clearance for the water tank filler. As smart as
the GMC guys were, the location of the water fill and the placement of the fill hose is about a dumb a thing as I could think of. For those with
transmodes, the fill hose is above the generator and the hose goes down below the 'hallway' at the very back of the coach, and back up to the tank.
Obviously it holds water and it makes you put in a bunch of pink stuff before ANY gets into the water tank.

So killing two birds with one mod, I moved the water fill over to beside the ladder.

http://www.gmcmhphotos.com/photos/new-cabinets-interior-mods/p55765-interior-mods-00006.html

On the inside, the water line is nice and flat and I ran the vent line back to it's place in the new filler assembly. It has a built in screen to
keep critters out. The old vent line was a piece of hose pipe that went 'somewhere' up under the bath module.

http://www.gmcmhphotos.com/photos/new-cabinets-interior-mods/p55767-interior-mods-00007.html

I removed the old hose fitting from the original filler assembly and it's now flush with the line of the interior wall. A piece of aluminum was
siliconed to cover the hole and it should be nice and water tight.

This morning about 3:30 I woke up with an epiphany. In our vast experience with our GMC and camping in general, we've always run the TV cable from
the power post where they hookup is normally located all the way to the drivers slide cockpit window and into the coach. It occurred to me that this
is the perfect time to solve that problem so this morning before Church, I was at Lowes and picked up a TV cable splitter and some cable. The
splitter is going to be mounted in the old filler box and two lines will be run. One up front and one in the rear 'bedroom'. Once that is done, I'll
just unlock the door and screw in the coax to the splitter.

Btw, I got to try out the contact cement that Jim Bounds suggested ( DAP WeldWood Landau Roof and Trim). I got a gallon from the folks doing my
headliner. I did all the side panels above the beltline with it. Used an old spray gun and it really works nice and REALLY sticks. Tomorrow I have
to do the cable thing, make the new wall above the generator, and I'll be ready for the new headliner. I've got lots of other things to do so there
is no rest for the weary.
--
Kerry Pinkerton

North Alabama, near Huntsville,

77 Eleganza II, "The Lady", 403CI, Manny Brakes, 1 ton, tranny also a 76 Eleganza to be re-bodied as an Art Deco car hauler
 
> My long suffering wife harasses me about taking on too much. It's now 19 days until we need to be ready to go and the interior is out of the
> coach. No pressure though honey. :lol:
>
> In order to put in the new rear windows, the interior plastic end cap has to come off in order to get to the screws to remove the old window and
> put in the new ones.
>
> So while I'm waiting on the upholstery shop to do the headliner panels (Tuesday hopefully), I pulled everything out of the rear bedroom. The
> plastic panels were nice and yellowed. A bit of new plastic rattle cans did the trick and now they are a nice white and should match the white
> headliner nicely.
>
> Getting the back piece out and back in is a challenge but if you turn it upside down, and put one end in the corner by the ladder, the other end
> WILL go into the hall with a bit of effort.

Kerry,

Guys like you never cease to amaze me. Unfortunately it makes me feel a little like a slug. Don't get me wrong, I get some things done but you just
keep knocking it out of the park. Nice work.

--
'74 Eleganza, SE, Howell + EBL
Best Wishes,
George
 
> ... I get some things done but you just keep knocking it out of the park. Nice work.

There is a price to pay for moving this fast. Today, I was making an aluminum piece out of 1/8 plate to cover the new electric pumps from road gators
and debris and was cleaning up the saw cuts on my belt grinder. It was hot, I was tired, and moving much too fast....finished the clean up and turned
around while the belt was still spinning and let the back of my hand swing out hit the 36 grit spinning belt on the Burr King. No major blood but a
good bit of oozing skin. Carolyn was not impressed.
--
Kerry Pinkerton

North Alabama, near Huntsville,

77 Eleganza II, "The Lady", 403CI, Manny Brakes, 1 ton, tranny also a 76 Eleganza to be re-bodied as an Art Deco car hauler
 
Been there and done that. Sandy was just as impressed as Carolyn was. Hmm...
I seem to impress her like that a lot.

Guy Lopes
76 Birchaven "Orion"
Sacramento, CA
W6TOL

www.GMC-Guy.com

-----Original Message-----
From: gmclist-bounces
[mailto:gmclist-bounces] On Behalf Of Kerry Pinkerton
Sent: Monday, September 01, 2014 6:53 PM
To: gmclist
Subject: Re: [GMCnet] Redoing the bedroom

> ... I get some things done but you just keep knocking it out of the park.
Nice work.

There is a price to pay for moving this fast. Today, I was making an
aluminum piece out of 1/8 plate to cover the new electric pumps from road
gators and debris and was cleaning up the saw cuts on my belt grinder. It
was hot, I was tired, and moving much too fast....finished the clean up and
turned around while the belt was still spinning and let the back of my hand
swing out hit the 36 grit spinning belt on the Burr King. No major blood
but a good bit of oozing skin. Carolyn was not impressed.
--
Kerry Pinkerton

North Alabama, near Huntsville,

77 Eleganza II, "The Lady", 403CI, Manny Brakes, 1 ton, tranny also a 76
Eleganza to be re-bodied as an Art Deco car hauler
_______________________________________________
GMCnet mailing list
Unsubscribe or Change List Options:
http://temp.gmcnet.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/gmclist
 
OUCH!

Carolyn may have to restrict you to hand tools - NO HAMMERS! ;-)

Be careful!

Regards,
Rob M

-----Original Message-----
From: Kerry Pinkerton

There is a price to pay for moving this fast. Today, I was making an aluminum piece out of 1/8 plate to cover the new electric
pumps from road gators and debris and was cleaning up the saw cuts on my belt grinder. It was hot, I was tired, and moving much too
fast....finished the clean up and turned around while the belt was still spinning and let the back of my hand swing out hit the 36
grit spinning belt on the Burr King. No major blood but a good bit of oozing skin. Carolyn was not impressed.
--
Kerry
 
> There is a price to pay for moving this fast. Today, I was making an aluminum piece out of 1/8 plate to cover the new electric pumps from road
> gators and debris and was cleaning up the saw cuts on my belt grinder. It was hot, I was tired, and moving much too fast....finished the clean up
> and turned around while the belt was still spinning and let the back of my hand swing out hit the 36 grit spinning belt on the Burr King. No major
> blood but a good bit of oozing skin. Carolyn was not impressed.

Yeah - BTDT

I got this sign to "prevent" that from happening:

http://www.gmcmhphotos.com/photos/miscellaneous-pictures/p43975-barn-signs.html
--
Steve Southworth
1974 Glacier TZE064V100150 (for workin on)
1975 Transmode TZE365V100394 (parts & spares)
Palmyra WI
 
FREE WIFI @ Mickey D




>> ... I get some things done but you just keep knocking it out of the park. Nice work.
>
>
> There is a price to pay for moving this fast. Today, I was making an aluminum piece out of 1/8 plate to cover the new electric pumps from road gators
> and debris and was cleaning up the saw cuts on my belt grinder. It was hot, I was tired, and moving much too fast....finished the clean up and turned
> around while the belt was still spinning and let the back of my hand swing out hit the 36 grit spinning belt on the Burr King. No major blood but a
> good bit of oozing skin. Carolyn was not impresse

Stop that
We need you

Erf

> --
> Kerry Pinkerton
>
> North Alabama, near Huntsville,
>
> 77 Eleganza II, "The Lady", 403CI, Manny Brakes, 1 ton, tranny also a 76 Eleganza to be re-bodied as an Art Deco car hauler
> _______________________________________________
> GMCnet mailing list
> Unsubscribe or Change List Options:
> http://temp.gmcnet.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/gmclist
 
Things coming together.

As Jim B said, the cellular blinds are a bit thicker so I had to glue/screw some spacers on the back of the rear wooden cabinets. Ran out of time to
make aluminum ones for the bedroom.

http://www.gmcmhphotos.com/photos/new-cabinets-interior-mods/p55808-interior-mods-000011.html

http://www.gmcmhphotos.com/photos/new-cabinets-interior-mods/p55809-interior-mods-00002.html

Came out very nice.

http://www.gmcmhphotos.com/photos/new-cabinets-interior-mods/p55811-interior-mods-000041.html

It's hard to get a decent photo of the back bedroom...just no room.

http://www.gmcmhphotos.com/photos/new-cabinets-interior-mods/p55812-interior-mods-000051.html

Btw, this is my favorite plastic/vinyl paint. Much better coverage than most. Krylon is a close second imo.

http://www.gmcmhphotos.com/photos/new-cabinets-interior-mods/p55810-interior-mods-000031.html

If you look close you can see the new headliner. The folks at Rod's Custom did a great job and gave me a pleasant surprise when the final bill was
$120 less than the estimate they gave me. Unusual in this day and age but they've earned my repeat business.

Btw, the contact cement we discussed earlier that they use is THE BOMB! Good Chit! as my Swedish metalshaping buddy says. The stuff available at the
big box stores just won't hold any time at all. This new stuff is GOOD!.
--
Kerry Pinkerton

North Alabama, near Huntsville,

77 Eleganza II, "The Lady", 403CI, Manny Brakes, 1 ton, tranny also a 76 Eleganza to be re-bodied as an Art Deco car hauler