Nick02
Member
- 43
- 3
- 8
- Location
- Phoenix Arizona
I have been having fun...
A little too much fun, up till midnight working on this thing everyday for the past two weeks.
Had a squeaky squeaky noise so I changed the water pump and she has been running great. Took it shooting!
Time for the camper, I have been moving SUPER fast, this thing is my full time residence now haha!
All the bolts holding the 5th wheel on were rusted solid so I cut them off and hammered them out.
I then used some 2x6" boxed tubing to prepare the trailer frame mount, the main mount is secured over the rear axle and welded to the 5th wheel outriggers, the camper will follow this mount when articulating. The rear pivot is a 2.5"" solid bushing in a half inch thick 3" sleeve with 3/8" plate gusseting it to the frame. The front pivots are GM transmission mounts.
Here is the camper, a 1988 Fleetwood 20' 5th wheel, it has a really low ceiling height and that's why I chose it.
To keep everything as low and compact as possible I decided to cut into the engine doghouse and remove the ROPS, a GM lQ4 automatic transmission mount sits atop this and takes some of the loading of the camper.
I then cut the axles and tongue off the camper and lifted it into the air with a forklift and my Cummins swapped C60 with a Holmes 600 wrecker.
I slowly backed the truck under the sucker, got it right on the second try, it was fun!!
Here it is not mounted but sitting on all of the mounts, the total height is 13' with the A/C and 11'8" to the roof
Nudging the camper into the final position.
Main mount burned in.
Rear pivot mount, this will get gusseted to the rear bumper/departure angle structure.
As she sits
A little too much fun, up till midnight working on this thing everyday for the past two weeks.
Had a squeaky squeaky noise so I changed the water pump and she has been running great. Took it shooting!
Time for the camper, I have been moving SUPER fast, this thing is my full time residence now haha!
All the bolts holding the 5th wheel on were rusted solid so I cut them off and hammered them out.
I then used some 2x6" boxed tubing to prepare the trailer frame mount, the main mount is secured over the rear axle and welded to the 5th wheel outriggers, the camper will follow this mount when articulating. The rear pivot is a 2.5"" solid bushing in a half inch thick 3" sleeve with 3/8" plate gusseting it to the frame. The front pivots are GM transmission mounts.
Here is the camper, a 1988 Fleetwood 20' 5th wheel, it has a really low ceiling height and that's why I chose it.
To keep everything as low and compact as possible I decided to cut into the engine doghouse and remove the ROPS, a GM lQ4 automatic transmission mount sits atop this and takes some of the loading of the camper.
I then cut the axles and tongue off the camper and lifted it into the air with a forklift and my Cummins swapped C60 with a Holmes 600 wrecker.
I slowly backed the truck under the sucker, got it right on the second try, it was fun!!
Here it is not mounted but sitting on all of the mounts, the total height is 13' with the A/C and 11'8" to the roof
Nudging the camper into the final position.
Main mount burned in.
Rear pivot mount, this will get gusseted to the rear bumper/departure angle structure.
As she sits
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