The frame nearly completed:
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I bought a drawbar toolbox from ebay which fitted neatly accross the front of the body and still left enough drawbar length to jackknife to 90 degrees.
Rear levelling legs were also from ebay, as was the jockey wheel. I had to extend the jockey wheel and used a section of tube cut from one of the Rangie driveshafts.
At this point, the plans were evolving to incorporate a removable ladder rack type frame to which a roofrack or rooftop tent could be mounted. The frame legs would slide into the body corners and be held by a pinch bolt.
I was also planning on hot dip galvanising the entire frame. Becasue of this, I decided not to weld floor and side panels to the frame, because of the risk of the sheet warping during galvanising. The plan was to Sikaflex 3mm alloy sheet to the frame after galvanising. 3mm alloy is about the same weight as 1mm zinc anneal sheet and probably stiffer in a HT grade. Sikaflex 252 is used to bond panels to truck and coach bodies. In hindsight, I perhaps should have used less hollow sections and more open sections eg EA or PFC, as all the hollow sections had to be drilled for venting. One mistake I definitely made was to use Duragal steel sections - this was all my local steel place had in stock. While it generates a lot more weld spatter than black or primed steel, the real issue is that the galvanisers have to strip it by leaving it in the acid bath overnight. Typically this adds about $1/kg to the galvanising cost. Having said this, the rangie chassis had some fairly heavy surface rust on the inside which probably needed the same amount of time in the acid to be fully removed.
Galvanising also means that you preferably want to have all the welding done, holes drilled, brackets fitted etc that you can before hand. Its frustrating having to weld and damage the galvanising when you change your mind or realise something was forgotten.


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