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> Converting dinette into a "U" with more accessible storage.
peterh
post Jun 29 2008, 11:38 PM
Post #16


Member
Location: Portland, Oregon Metro Area
RV Type:2005 Scamp 5th Wheel



Attached File  08Jun29BSeatFraming1.JPG ( 42.99K ) Number of downloads: 69
This is the support for the back side of the back bench, made from furring strips that are glued and screwed together. You need a back support because there is no "curb" support where the table used to be. The bottom end of the legs are tapered somewhat to fit the tight space behind the tank. There are also furring strips glued with urethane glue to the front edges of the bench, and another furring strip glued along the top edge of the front cover for the tank.

Attached File  08Jun29BSeatFraming2.JPG ( 46.37K ) Number of downloads: 59
Assembled they look like this.

Attached File  08Jun29BSeatFraming3.JPG ( 55.25K ) Number of downloads: 72
The back support is glued toward the back underside of the bench. Be careful to align the spot where you glue it with the position it'll be in when snug to the tank. This isn't flush with the back!

Attached File  08Jun29BTemplateSeat7.JPG ( 48.77K ) Number of downloads: 53
It all comes together like this.

Attached File  08Jun29BSeatBack1.JPG ( 114.5K ) Number of downloads: 21
The seat back will be 1/4" plywood with upholstery covering. Here I'm marking a radius on an upper corner.

Attached File  08Jun29BSeatBack2.JPG ( 69.72K ) Number of downloads: 36
Two pieces of plywood are glued and screwed to furring strip supports that give a slight angle to the back.











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peterh
post Jun 29 2008, 11:48 PM
Post #17


Member
Location: Portland, Oregon Metro Area
RV Type:2005 Scamp 5th Wheel



Attached File  08Jun29BSeatBack3.JPG ( 63.14K ) Number of downloads: 22
The top support is slightly different: it was cut with a bow in it to match the back of the trailer between the window and where the table was. The rest of the supports that hold the plywood in place are straight.

Attached File  08Jun29BSeatBack4.JPG ( 92.7K ) Number of downloads: 31
Two of these, one attached to the trailer wall with the "L" facing up and one in the middle of the seatback facing down hold the seat more or less in place.

Attached File  08Jun29BSeatBack5.JPG ( 75.09K ) Number of downloads: 35
Attached File  08Jun29BSeatBack6.JPG ( 80.39K ) Number of downloads: 25


Attached File  08Jun29BSeatBack7.JPG ( 51.13K ) Number of downloads: 38
The little block of wood under the "L" rail on the wall slides just over the furring strip at the bottom of the seat back, preventing it from bouncing up and off the "L" rail.





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peterh
post Jun 30 2008, 12:00 AM
Post #18


Member
Location: Portland, Oregon Metro Area
RV Type:2005 Scamp 5th Wheel



Attached File  08Jun29BSeatBack8.JPG ( 62.9K ) Number of downloads: 90
The plywood seat back supported on its "L" rail.

Attached File  08Jun29BSeatBackCovering1.JPG ( 57.3K ) Number of downloads: 27
I glued 1/2 thick high-density foam to the back using 3M Super 77 adhesive, then trimmed the excess.

Attached File  08Jun29BSeatBackCovering2.JPG ( 42.58K ) Number of downloads: 24
Then the thickest batting I could find at JoAnn Fabrics was glued on, leaving 2" of overlap past the edges.

Attached File  08Jun29BSeatBackCovering3.JPG ( 59.29K ) Number of downloads: 35
The fabric was stretched tight and stapled in place, starting from the center of one of the long sides and working out, then the other long side from the center out, then each of the short sides, center out. Lots of staples, each hammered a second time to make sure they stay.

Attached File  08Jun29BSeatBackCovering14.JPG ( 75.16K ) Number of downloads: 161
Lynne has been busy making cushions. My sweetie is a wonderful woman. 48.gif

The corner pillows are a "work in progress," and I have some things to do, like adding trim to the front edge of the back and side benches, replacing the Scamp reading lights with the new LED reading lights I'm making, and I have to make a table, but that's next weekend . . .


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peterh
post Jul 6 2008, 05:57 PM
Post #19


Member
Location: Portland, Oregon Metro Area
RV Type:2005 Scamp 5th Wheel



Made & installed a table today. It's a simple piece of MDF, cut to shape with Lowes in-stock laminate and a white iron-on Melamine tape edge. Same basic shape as the standard Scamp table, but just 24" x 30" in size.

Attached File  08Jul06DinetteTableFun.JPG ( 40.01K ) Number of downloads: 247
Attached File  08Jul06DinetteTableEdgeAndLaminate.jpg ( 34.06K ) Number of downloads: 109


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Steve Hilby
post Jul 10 2008, 06:25 AM
Post #20


Member
Location: Olympia
RV Type:Compact Jr.



It'll be interesting to see how the iron-on tape holds up. When I built tables for my sister's and her friend's trailers, I used aluminum L-shaped edging attached with screws--mostly for durability.

I love Formica (or generic equivalent) for a table surface--easy to install, rugged, easy to clean, not prone to water damage.
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peterh
post Jul 10 2008, 09:01 PM
Post #21


Member
Location: Portland, Oregon Metro Area
RV Type:2005 Scamp 5th Wheel



QUOTE (Steve Hilby @ Jul 10 2008, 07:25 AM) *
It'll be interesting to see how the iron-on tape holds up. When I built tables for my sister's and her friend's trailers, I used aluminum L-shaped edging attached with screws--mostly for durability.

I love Formica (or generic equivalent) for a table surface--easy to install, rugged, easy to clean, not prone to water damage.


The main liability with the edge tape is it's easy to catch the end of the tape on a trouser seam or other bit of clothing as people slide into and out of the dinette. If, on the other hand, your table has gentle rounded curves and not angled corners you can wrap the tape all the way around the edge to a single seam at the back where it won't experience as much wear-and-tear, then iron-on tape can last for years. Occasionally a top or bottom edge may get pulled up, but you can generally fix that by setting a standard clothes iron to its highest setting and pressing the stuff back into place.

When the edge tape finally does give out you can remove it with a hot iron iron and a pair of needle-nose pliers; just start at the seam at the back and use the iron to melt the tape's hot-melt adhesive so you can pull it up with the pliers, then work your way around the table. Once the old tape is removed you can iron on a whole new tape, carefully trim the overlap above and below the table off with a razor edge, and the table edge really is as good as new.


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peterh
post Jul 13 2008, 12:10 AM
Post #22


Member
Location: Portland, Oregon Metro Area
RV Type:2005 Scamp 5th Wheel



Replaced one of the two dinette reading lights with LED reading lights I made.

Attached File  08Jul13NewLEDReadingLightUnlit.JPG ( 44.85K ) Number of downloads: 33
Attached File  08Jul13NewLEDReadingLightLit.JPG ( 45.66K ) Number of downloads: 42
The lights are converted Home Depot track lights I bought on clearance that have been stripped of their "track" connectors and had their 110v AC lamp sockets replaced with pin-base sockets designed for MR11/MR16 12v track lights. The socket design allows me to easily upgrade the LED light if a better, brighter 2w LD light comes along. The 6-LED "Warm White" 12v MR11 wide-angle spot I installed here is from LEDWholesalers.com. The push-button on/off switch to one side of the light came from Lowes.

Attached File  08Jul13NewLEDReadingLightWiring.JPG ( 51.64K ) Number of downloads: 35
The wiring is pretty straight forward except I soldered a 12v regulator from Radio Shack into the circuit between the switch and the light. The regulator protects the LED bulb from getting cooked if the voltage the converter supplies to the 12 volt system peaks over 14V.

Attached File  08Jul13OldReadingLight.JPG ( 45.61K ) Number of downloads: 51
Much prettier than the reading light the Scamp came with.

I would have gotten the other side of the dinette wired up this evening, but I broke one of the "legs" off the regulator while I was soldering it into the circuit, so I have to buy another regulator tomorrow, remove the old one, and solder the new one in place.




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peterh
post Jul 13 2008, 01:59 PM
Post #23


Member
Location: Portland, Oregon Metro Area
RV Type:2005 Scamp 5th Wheel



Both reading lights are installed now . . . now our entire 12v lighting system runs on LEDs, so I can turn every light the trailer on and still use less energy than just two of the old 12v incandescent light bulbs the trailer came with. Better yet, the new lighting does a better job of lighting the trailer up than the old incandescent lights did, and the new LEDs don't have that annoying blue color. (Something cold cathode fluorescents and older LED lights tended to have.) That should make boondocking with our one roof-mounted solar panel a lot easier.

There are only a few things left to do on this project, and most of them will have to wait for me to get to other projects before I can do them. The major one is the gaps between the dinette benches, the kitchenette cabinets and the white panel covering the water tank at the back of the dinette which need to be filled/caulked and a caulk line run along the floor line, but that needs to wait until I put the exterior hatch doors under the bench seats so we can access the storage areas from outside. Hopefully that'll get done before we go out for two weeks with the trailer later this summer. Another annoyance is the fresh water tank outlet started leaking, so I'm going to have to pull the tank and figure out how to plastic-weld a new fitting in, and that has to be fixed before our trip.


Attached File  08Jul13DinetteAlmostDone.jpg ( 40.28K ) Number of downloads: 202
So this is what the new "U" dinette is gonna look like for a while. I'm really happy with it.

One last thing to show you. When I cut the MDF for the table top I had two big triangular pieces of scrap. Rather than throw them away I glued them to a bit of scrap plywood that fit between my two dinette benches and made an insert that fills the gap when the table top has been dropped to convert the dinette into a bed. I just drop in the insert then turn the table around so the "front" edge of the table points "back" and I get a nice solid sleeping deck.

Attached File  08Jul13TableDownInsert1.jpg ( 32.51K ) Number of downloads: 84
Attached File  08Jul13TableDownInsert2.jpg ( 44.49K ) Number of downloads: 87


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Ian-Vicki
post Jul 13 2008, 02:37 PM
Post #24


Member
Location: Pender Island, B.C.
RV Type:17' Burro widebody, TV 2007 Ford Ranger



Great work Peter — as usual. bowdown.gif But I'm interested in the access panels. Are they metal or fibreglass or poly? Hinged or just pullout? If hinged, up or down? I have been looking at some hatch covers at West marine suitable for fibreglass application, but have been a little gunshy about actually putting holes in the exterior of the Burro. What tools do you plan to use, and how will you secure the panels to the Scamp?
By the way, if you make house calls and you're interested in a working holiday on one of the lovely Canadian Gulf Islands just a short ferry ride to Victoria or Vancouver, I think we could work something out (LOL) woohoo.gif
cheers
Ian

This post has been edited by Ian-Vicki: Jul 13 2008, 02:38 PM
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peterh
post Jul 13 2008, 04:26 PM
Post #25


Member
Location: Portland, Oregon Metro Area
RV Type:2005 Scamp 5th Wheel



QUOTE (Ian-Vicki @ Jul 13 2008, 03:37 PM) *
Great work Peter — as usual. bowdown.gif But I'm interested in the access panels . . .


Thanks for the compliment! And, as for the questions:

>Are they metal or fibreglass or poly? Hinged or just pullout?

I bought two T H Marine locking access Hatches, one 13x24" hatch for the curbside, another 13X17 streetside hatch. (The smaller streetside hatch to allow room for the electric and water hookups.) West Marine sells them, but I found them for 2/3 the price from an eBay retailer, A Bass Boat Store, and they were very easy to deal with.

These are the same hinged poly units that Camper Bob installed successfully in his Scamp 5th wheel; as for how I install them, I'll figure that out over the next month and a half after Bandon, and will post another topic showing how I do it.

>If hinged, up or down?

Attached File  08Jul08CurbSideHatch.JPG ( 24.35K ) Number of downloads: 60
Attached File  08Jul08StreetSideHatch.JPG ( 30.33K ) Number of downloads: 51
Actually kinda horizontal just now. Later on they'll be installed with the hinge horizontal, running just below the "curb" the back of the dinette bench rests on.

QUOTE
By the way, if you make house calls and you're interested in a working holiday on one of the lovely Canadian Gulf Islands just a short ferry ride to Victoria or Vancouver, I think we could work something out (LOL) woohoo.gif


Dunno about this "working holiday" idea. Isn't that something like "honest politician?" rolleyes.gif

This post has been edited by peterh: Jul 13 2008, 04:28 PM


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Lisa H.
post Jul 21 2008, 08:44 PM
Post #26


Member
Location: Southern California
RV Type:1970 Campster



Peter-
You have some of the greatest ideas!!! Thanks for being so generous with your posts! I can't tell from the photos, but did you get the locking hatches? If so, do they have universal keys like all the RV compartments in the world, or are they individually keyed?
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peterh
post Jul 21 2008, 09:57 PM
Post #27


Member
Location: Portland, Oregon Metro Area
RV Type:2005 Scamp 5th Wheel



QUOTE (Lisa H. @ Jul 21 2008, 09:44 PM) *
. . . did you get the locking hatches . . . do they have universal keys like all the RV compartments in the world . . . ?


Yes, locking hatches with universal keys. I'll take them and my door lock to a locksmith and have him re-key everything to the same key. It'll cost me, but the added convenience and security is quite worth the cost.


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Lisa H.
post Jul 24 2008, 02:42 PM
Post #28


Member
Location: Southern California
RV Type:1970 Campster



Peter-

I'm following your lead and purchased two of the locking marine hatches. I can't wait for them to arrive! okrra.gif The Bass Boat Store eventually answered my inquiry about the keys and said that the manufacturer makes the locking hatches with four different locks. The store believes that all of the hatches they stock are keyed the same. I'm bewildered by how the boat and RV industries do so little in the way of security measures. confuse.gif

I'll look forward to seeing how you install these. I sure will enjoy having easy access to my portable BBQ, other outdoor kitchen equipment, hoses, etc. especially since I'm reorienting the beds, which will make access from inside the trailer a bit more challenging. My only concern is since I will install these hatches about 12" below the windows I wonder if this will weaken the structural support of these thin walls? I'm guessing I'll need to build a wood frame on the interior side and this will help shore up the support of the walls. Any thoughts on this subject?

Thanx.gif
Lisa
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Mike Montville
post Jul 24 2008, 02:56 PM
Post #29


Member
Location: Minnesota
RV Type:75 Boler



QUOTE (peterh @ Jul 21 2008, 09:57 PM) *
Yes, locking hatches with universal keys. I'll take them and my door lock to a locksmith and have him re-key everything to the same key. It'll cost me, but the added convenience and security is quite worth the cost.


Your "U" shapped seating LOOOOOOKs very nice! Top notch work! You will like it, ours has served us well!
Mike


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"I'm just a common man, I drive a common van, my dog don't have a pedigree, If I have my way, I'm going to stay this way, cuz my fiberglass camper is my,----- sanity!)
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April Wilcox
post Oct 6 2008, 06:15 AM
Post #30


Member
Location: Houston, TX
RV Type:13' scamp 1983



We want to do this exact update... Thanks for posting as you went along on your project, it will help us build ours right the first time! I have a question, how wide did you make your bench? I know you mentioned the table is only 24" x 30" does it fit the gap exactly as it did before you changed it? I really like this design, it just looks more inviting and comfortable, plus you lose that HEAVY table.
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