Wednesday 27 February 2013

Bus Convertion Home

School Bus Conversion Camper RV
School Bus Conversion Camper RVbus conversion interior
In 1982 I was a sophomore at a small college in the Midwest. It was the beginning of second term and I was again standing in line at the on-campus book store waiting to pay for a too-heavy stack of text books. The line was not moving at all so I put my books down on the floor and started flipping through the coffee table books on display. The book I chose to pick up first was titled Rolling Homes - Handmade House on Wheels by Jane Lidz. Thus the seed was planted.
Sometime in late August, 2004 this seed suddenly germinated and I started researching and preparing for this project. I located several good on-line sources of information, ordered a copy of Ben Rosander's Select and Convert Your Bus Into a Motorhome on a Shoestring, made some sketches of floor plans, started collecting materials and fittings, and researched the cost of insurance and registration.Above left you see the raw material for my school bus conversion project it's a 1989 Thomas Saf-T-Liner MVP with a rear mounted CAT 3208 engine.

It was originally built for 75 Passengers with a GVWR 30,000 lbs. It's got about between 80 and 100K miles on it and originally came from Montrose, NY. The interior dimensions are 35' x 7.5' x 6.5'. I bought it on eBay for $2031.00.

Over the next several months I will be converting this old school bus into a family camper and documenting each step of the conversion process here.
Now the project has begun! Herein you will find the details of each step of the process of my school bus conversion into a family camper. This is a low-budget project, wherever possible materials will be re-used and recycled.

Tools you'll need:

angle grindercordless drill
Some of the tools that are particularly useful for bus conversion.

Preparation:

take seats outseats all out
Step one, have a party and remove the seats!

Floorplan:

floor plan
Preliminary floor plan.

Framing:

bunk wallinsulating bunk room
Insulation and framing.

Bunks:

making bunkswaterbed base
Building bunks and a double bed in the master bedroom.

Cabinetry:

desk 4outside of the bathroom
Cabinetry fore and aft.

Bathroom:

cutting a hole in the bus floormedicine cabinet and sconce lamp in bathroom
Installing the shower and fitting out the bathroom.

Tanks and Plumbing:

blackwater and drinking water tanksboth tanks in
Hanging the tanks and general plumbing.

Propane:

Bottles in bayattaching the stove
Cooking with gas!

Lighting:

single Edison bulb adaptersat night
Lighting, 12 volt and kerosene.

Dinette:

steel base of school bus seatmirror over dinette
Dinette and convertible spare bed.

Electrical:

Electric supply and wiring.

Electronics:

ATX PSUATX PSU 12 Volt Converter
Converting an ATX power supply to be a 12 volt bench supply.

Kitchen:

Building the kitchen.

Paint:

Painted Front
Painting the bus with True Value XO-Rust.

Body & Chassis:

Holes left by flashing lightsScreens on the bus
Body work, screen, seat mounting.

Engineer's Log:

unbolting the fan bladeRadiator back from the shop
Radiator replacement.

Safety:

backup camera monitorwheel chocks for bus
Wheel chocks, backup monitor, fire extinguishers, CO & smoke detectors.

Interior Paint & Decor:

interior latex paint in front of the busmystic seaport bus bunk back wall
Interior painting and finish

Vacations:

Pillsbury State Park Smokey Bearbus at salisbury beach state park site B50
Pillsbury State Park in New Hampshire and Salisbury Beach State Park in Massachusetts.

Toyota Yaris Pages:

Toyota Yaris ToadYaris short shifter
We sold the Town Car and retired the mini-van and bought a pair of 2007 Toyota Yarii one of which (probably the black one due to the diesel soot! ) we will tow behind the motorhome. Here are some pictures of the Yaris and some notes on towing the Yaris and a short article about installing a Short Shifter Kit.

Bus Bookmarks:

Interesing bus conversion sites and resources

2 comments:

  1. Hi, my name is Terence Tung. I live in central NJ. I love traveling, especially traveling by RV, but I don’t own one. A new class B RV cost over a hundred grand so I’m thinking to do the bus conversion. I really enjoyed to read your postings and thank you very much for that.

    I turned 60 last year and still working full time. I would like to plan for my retirement so I can travel by RV to see the North America. I know I need lots of time, knowledge and skill to do what you’re doing. It truly will be a challenge but I know I will enjoy doing it. I’m not sure if you willing do some work for me, with charge, of course.

    Thank you again for your terrific postings.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Sorry. I meant 100 grand for the class B RV. I wish it’s cheaper.

    ReplyDelete