Popular Post simonr Posted January 8, 2021 Popular Post Share Posted January 8, 2021 As some of you know, I now work in Movie Special Effects which involved very long hours, a long way from home. On my first film, I got to a point where I was just too tired to drive home and after a few 'near death experiences' decided I needed a solution! Initially I just stayed in a Hotel - but at best part of £100 per night, it soon adds up. At the end of the film, I built my first Camper Van. It was based on a Vauxhall Movano MWB - and it was great! Over the next few years, I slept in it over 1000 Nights! It's main 'trick' (almost Special Effect) feature was the bed. It was winched up to ceiling height during the day which gave me a good amount of space to live in - and a full size, comfortable, double bed at night. During the Lockdown (first one), the Film Industry shut down - so I had several months un-planned holiday and decided I needed a project! I didn't really intend to build another van - but somehow, the idea gathered momentum until I found myself actually building it. It started with a load of CAD drawing and after a couple of weeks, it started looking quite good! This is my final draft before I bought a van. I went into a lot of detail! The little black & white circle is the centre of mass. The materials and weights of all the bits was as accurate as I could be. I wanted the van to behave on the road - and be within the weight limit - so this seemed the best approach. As you might be able to see - this has water, underfloor heating (no more cold toes!) powered by a modified Webasto ThermoTop C (which was a project in itself). Like before, the bed is designed to rise up into the ceiling. However, this time, instead of using a single winch, I've used 4 long lead screws & 4 motors. Why you ask? It's so I can make the bed self-level! Self levelling suspension is so last week - I'd never heard of a self levelling bed though! It adds a whole new meaning to a 'Rock 'n roll bed'! Here's actually one of the Land Rover bits! The bed sits on Disco 3 anti roll bar bushes. These give enough flexibility that they take up the length difference when the bed pitches or rolls. They were just the right size to fit around the lead-screw Ball-Nut. All the metalwork was cut on my CNC Plasma table - and there's a surprising amount of 3D Printed bits - mostly brackets. 4 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
simonr Posted January 8, 2021 Author Share Posted January 8, 2021 Because of the lockdown, it was difficult to go & look at vans to buy. I decided to look at brand new vans instead - figuring I'd get closer to what I wanted (a Renault Master Low Loader). It turned out that Renault had a load of these as part of a cancelled order - and were very keen to do a deal. It ended up costing me about £10k less than list - and they delivered it. This is the day it arrived, sitting in my front garden. Renault even supplied me a 3D Cad model of the interior - which allowed me to start building before it actually arrived (first Error!). Being a regular box, the insulation was easier. I just used foam board insulation. There's 90mm thick on the walls, 80mm on the ceiling & 60mm on the floor, including the underfloor heating panels. I wish I could have put thicker insulation on the floor & ceiling but unfortunately the model was wrong. There was 100mm less ceiling height than I was expecting and the back was 50mm shorter - but 80mm wider. I had designed all the furniture and had it all CNC Routed to be a perfect fit! After I'd measured the van, sworn a bit, I had to trim everything to fit. Next time - I'll wait until I actually have the van! This was Day 2 - laying the floor & putting in the underfloor heating pipework. It was pretty easy once I'd got the hang of it! I love Solidworks! 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
simonr Posted January 8, 2021 Author Share Posted January 8, 2021 By week 2, I'd insulated and lined the whole thing with Ply. The walls have 4mm thick while the bulkhead is 12mm - just to provide a bit of extra protection from stuff coming to visit me in the cab, unexpectedly! I bought 'Habitation Doors' from https://www.vehiclewindows.co.uk/ They were a bit slow to deliver - but the quality is very good and they made them to size. The doors are air-tight which helps keep it warm - though there's plenty of ventilation when I need. I fitted a Maxx Fan in the roof for ventilation. I had to persuade (hammer) the door into the hole I cut. When I switched the fan on, full blast, it sucked the door out of the frame! At least I know everything is well sealed! I did consider fitting air conditioning - but thought I'd try another 'bright idea' instead! My old van used to get uncomfortably hot on summer days. I noticed however that the air at road level was 10C cooler than at head height (under the van, where the sun wasn't heating it up). I decided to put in tubes that extend down to 10cm off the road for ventilation. The two flexible tubes you can see in the picture above are such - and there are two 6" vent pipes at the back. The cooler air is ducted to ceiling height. I played about with the vent sizes & positions in Solidworks, using the flow analysis to achieve the maximum cooling effect. The weather has been cold since I finished it - so I don't know how well it's worked yet. Just in case, I put in the wiring for air conditioning just in case! 3 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
steve b Posted January 8, 2021 Share Posted January 8, 2021 That self levelling bed is inspired and an engineering masterpiece Si , as expected with your experience and background . I'm jumping forward a fair bit , but what was involved in getting it registered as a camper on the V5C ? cheers Steve b Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Arjan Posted January 8, 2021 Share Posted January 8, 2021 Oh....... Love this one ! What type of Renault is that please ? I am seriously considering building a moving office - and that bed is what I had in mind using cables - but the self leveling is a very , very clever idea !!!!! Please keep this coming Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Blanco Posted January 8, 2021 Share Posted January 8, 2021 Wow! how nice it is to work with a new vehicle. Love the project. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
elbekko Posted January 8, 2021 Share Posted January 8, 2021 Oh, that is nice Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post simonr Posted January 8, 2021 Author Popular Post Share Posted January 8, 2021 I watched a few videos on line about carpet lining - and it looked really easy! However, when I tried it, it was a nightmare! I decided to sub this out to a local company. They did an OK job, but some of the finishing left a bit to be desired. I think it was harder than they expected. You can see on the left, the start of my electrical panel. In my old van, originally I had a 250Ah Lead Acid Battery. One would think that would be plenty - and it was initially. The problem is Lead Acid like being fully charged - but living away with only the solar and engine to charge it, it rarely got close to 100%. I found that the battery was pretty much toast after 6 months. Replaced it with a 'better' one - and that too only lasted 6 months. I then replaced it with a 100Ah LiFePO4 battery - and it lasted ever since! At least until I sold it. Even though I had less capacity, after a few months it had more capacity than a Lead Acid. For the next van, I decided LiFePO4 was the way to go. I considered Electric Vehicle Batteries and had several saved searches on eBay. Eventually something good (OTT) turned up. A Guy was selling new 'Winston' LiFePO4 Cells - intended for EV's. I enquired about a sensibly sized 300Ah pack - and he asked if I'd be interested in 780Ah worth of used cells, showing 98% Capacity for the same price. Seemed a good bet to me - and he delivered them personally the next day. The problem with such a large pack is the size / capacity of everything else has to increase with it - to give it a chance of being fully charged. I bought 3 x 425W solar Panels from Bimble Solar (very good supplier by the way) and a chunky MPPT Solar Charger. I looked at mains chargers, but they seemed incredibly expensive for what they were. Instead I bought a 15V, 90A power supply from Farnell and turned down the voltage to 14.6 (the Max for the cells). It was about £80 delivered. I also bought a used Sterling 90A Battery-toBattery charger on eBay. I needed one of these because the vehicle is Euro 6 and uses the Alternator for some energy recovery - so the battery voltage is rather too variable for a simple split charge. Who says I over-complicate things! The three Solid State Relays are part of my battery protection scheme. If the LiFePO4 gets too low (or too cold) some of the systems (one light and the heating) switch over to the main vehicle battery. If it drops too low, everything switches off. The little board with 4 blue relays is connected to the LiFePO4 battery management to enable / disable the various chargers / loads. The Honkin' big battery also means I can run a Microwave, Coffee Machine - even a hair drier (if I had any hair) and the battery barely notices. 6 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
simonr Posted January 8, 2021 Author Share Posted January 8, 2021 25 minutes ago, steve b said: That self levelling bed is inspired and an engineering masterpiece Si , as expected with your experience and background . I'm jumping forward a fair bit , but what was involved in getting it registered as a camper on the V5C ? cheers Steve b I've kept it registered as a Commercial. I need to be able to use it as a commercial at times. While I'm away, I just park up by the side of the road. On the outside, it's just a plain commercial white van with almost nothing to indicate it's a camper. It draws no more attention than any other white van. I deliberately didn't put windows in (though I've left spaces if it's next owner wants to) - figuring that, at night, there's not much to look at and they just pour heat out of the interior. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
simonr Posted January 8, 2021 Author Share Posted January 8, 2021 31 minutes ago, Arjan said: Oh....... Love this one ! What type of Renault is that please ? I am seriously considering building a moving office - and that bed is what I had in mind using cables - but the self leveling is a very , very clever idea !!!!! Please keep this coming It's a Renault Master Low Loader. They are listed on Renault's web site - but they are generally built to order. They are kind of like a LR Special Vehicles where they take a truck off the production line then send it to 'Truck Craft' who build the box back. It's sold and warrantied by Renault and is IVA'd (sorry, not meant to mention IVA here!) by Renault. Part of my requirement is to use it as a mobile office too - you'll have to wait for a later installment for that! Si 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
landroversforever Posted January 8, 2021 Share Posted January 8, 2021 This is great Si! I really like the leveling bed idea vs having to level the vehicle each time when its a quick stop. Have you got any interior doors planned? Quick stops and not leveled properly in the caravan are OK, but he doors swinging by themselves gets annoying after a few hours. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Arjan Posted January 8, 2021 Share Posted January 8, 2021 Thanks - I will look forward to the office bit, too ! Awesome build Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
simonr Posted January 8, 2021 Author Share Posted January 8, 2021 In the pictures above, you can see I've fitted a shower / bog. The lining of that in plastic wall covering was the hardest bit of the job - and I'm not delighted with the fit & finish of it, though I did my best. It is waterproof though. I struggled to find a decent thermostatic mixer tap for the Shower. The ones made for Campers are made form the most horrible, cheap plastic and priced like they're made of Gold! I ended up with a mixer tap for a Bidet! It turned out the port size (hence the flow) is the same as most domestic taps - but the housing is tiny by comparison to Bath Mixers. That brings me neatly on to the heating & water system. Again, it looks over-complicated, but I couldn't think of a simpler way of doing it! The big blue thing is a 'Calorifier' - essentially a hot water cylinder. It has two coils going through it. One is heated directly by the Webasto which you can see burried top-left and the other takes hot water and circulates it through the underfloor heating. The header tank & (blue) pump are for the heating. The Black thing bottom left is the accumulator for the Hot Water and the Red thing is the accumulator for cold water. I had originally intended that red & blue would signify hot & less hot - but it all got a bit muddled! The water in the Calorifier heats to about 80C and has a thermostatic mixer which dilutes this with cold water - giving a temperature at the tap of about 40C. It holds 25l of hot water - giving you about 40l at the tap (shower) without the Webasto. In it's more finished guise, all this is boxed in and looks tidy! It's all in the cupboard under the kitchen sink and the cupboard gets warm enough to act as an airing / drying cupboard. On the last film, I spent a week on set, outdoors in heaving rain (miserable but fun). Having the cupboard to dry clothes and in particular my boots over night was a godsend! Warm Towels are nice too! I'm going soft aren't I! 4 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
simonr Posted January 8, 2021 Author Share Posted January 8, 2021 8 minutes ago, landroversforever said: This is great Si! I really like the leveling bed idea vs having to level the vehicle each time when its a quick stop. Have you got any interior doors planned? Quick stops and not leveled properly in the caravan are OK, but he doors swinging by themselves gets annoying after a few hours. I only have a door to the cab and a shower / bog door - and they latch closed (both being gas tight). A gas-tight bog door is a plus - keeping unfortunate smells inside! The bed is controlled by an Arduino with an IMU to detect level. It drives 2 x 2 Channel RoboClaw motor controllers. It just has 4 buttons to control it - Up, Down, Level and E-Stop (just in case!) 3 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post simonr Posted January 8, 2021 Author Popular Post Share Posted January 8, 2021 The Webasto seemed like a good option - initially! I found that it would heat up at full tilt, get to 80C then shut down - then short-cycle. The heating doesn't take enough energy out of the system for the Webasto to run continuously. When it's starting up or shutting down, the heater plug draws 20A. When it's short-cycling, the 20A is almost continuous. I wondered if I might be better off just heating the water electrically! My solution (would you believe it?) was to design & build a new controller for the Webasto! I designed a PCB which replaced the original and hacked together a bit of code to drive it. It has WiFi too! The WiFi is mostly used to set parameters. It was surprisingly easy to get it to run - then took a bit of adjustment to make it run without too much smoke. The purpose of it is to be able to run at lower power. It now has it's original 4kW and as little as 1kW, continuously adjustable inbetween. Now it gets up to temperature quickly then throttles down and idles, increasing & decreasing with demand. I've also increased the hysteresis so when it reaches 80C, eventually, it waits for the water to drop below 40 before restarting - but keeps the water pump running. Since building, it's taken a bit of tweaking to get it to run consistently well - but I'm mostly happy with it now. It feels strange sitting in the van in the middle of the night with my laptop, reprogramming the heater - compared to what you can do with a Webasto. 6 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post simonr Posted January 8, 2021 Author Popular Post Share Posted January 8, 2021 After the technical stuff was done, I assembled the furniture. I'd designed it all in Solidworks so it mostly slotted together. I say mostly as some of the slots I'd used were not quite wide enough (not enough clearance) for even a hammer-together fit. A bit of sanding & adjusting with a Jig-saw and it went together (finally). The cupboard door hinges came from CPC - and were only about £2 each. You can see part of my ventilation system (white pipe) which sucks in air close to the ground & blows it out at ceiling height. It was intended to go straight down, behind the rear wheel - but somebody put a spring hanger there so it gained a bit of a diversion out the side of the cupboard. LED Cupboard lights! The last image is the bin - which I'm pleased with. I couldn't find anything suitable - so I plasma cut the bits for a pull out bin. I got a 'grown up' to fit the carpet - I doubted I would get it sufficiently square. 5 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post simonr Posted January 8, 2021 Author Popular Post Share Posted January 8, 2021 I couldn't figure out what to do about a sofa! I wanted something comfortable to sit on but it had to sit above the wheel-arch. In my old van, I had a couple of custom cushions made but they were not comfortable (wrong density of foam) and were eye-wateringly expensive. I had designed a sofa in Solidworks - and got the same company to quote to make the cushions. They wanted £1500 to make them! I used the van for a month, just using folding camping chairs - which worked OK. Then I came across a company on Etsy who were offering cushion sets for Wicker Chairs, made to my dimensions - and they only wanted £80 per chair. I ordered two chairs worth - and set about building the sofa frame. Again, this is slightly unusual because it's a folding-sofa (how many folding sofa's have you seen?!). It uses the same Ikea bed slats as I used on the bed, for the base - and ended up being really comfortable! I talked to the company who made the cushions - and they advised on foam density. They got it right! The little white circle on the floor is an air vent. The LED Lights stuck to the back doors are 'bedside' lights. I needed the sofa to fold for two reasons. The most important is when I need to use the van to transport stuff. It then gives me 1.6m x 2m clear space. The second part, that I've not built yet is I want to use it as a mobile office. The top piece of angle iron when the sofa is folded is 700mm off the floor. I Intend to make a desk which hinges from that bar and folds to be horizontal. Lastly is the bed in it's stowed position. I was worried that it would raise the centre of gravity too much and make the whole thing unstable - but actually it hardly makes any difference! Solidworks thinks the CoG raises by 100mm as all the really heavy things (water tanks & batteries) are quite low. I'm not planning on driving it like I stole it - so I think it will be fine! The end result is fantastic. It's been mostly finished for about 6 weeks before Christmas (there are always little bits to finish off). I'm very pleased with it! 8 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
landroversforever Posted January 8, 2021 Share Posted January 8, 2021 Have you spent many nights in it yet Si? Much of a test-use you can do on the drive at home. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Anderzander Posted January 8, 2021 Share Posted January 8, 2021 You are a clever chap ! Its brilliant - super innovative and fabulously executed! awesome ! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stellaghost Posted January 8, 2021 Share Posted January 8, 2021 You said my lightweight vent panel build was impressive I feel like a snotty nosed kid starting his apprenticeship next to you , well done truly inspiring regards Stephen Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hurbie Posted January 8, 2021 Share Posted January 8, 2021 really well done 👍 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
geoffbeaumont Posted January 8, 2021 Share Posted January 8, 2021 Wow... That is a work of art, Si. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Arjan Posted January 8, 2021 Share Posted January 8, 2021 This is really waay beyond taking it to the next level... More than impressive Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Daan Posted January 8, 2021 Share Posted January 8, 2021 Simon, thanks for the write up, very interesting. Must be a big advantage of it being disguised as a white van to not being disturbed by keepers of the law, or indeed by those who don't keep to the law. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Maverik Posted January 9, 2021 Share Posted January 9, 2021 Awesome bit of reading, really functional design, got to say I'm really impressed with the Webasto work. Superb. Mav Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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