Nice looking stand, and outboard.
Thanks
xtremek! Yesterday I picked a bottle of TiteBond III Xtreme and a silicone brush to spread the glue. In a few weeks I will hoist the engine off the stand and glue the stand together.
I've been incredibly busy the past 3 weeks, literally on the road traveling or attending a big trade show in Chicago. The week before Father's day I head to leave on Sunday to drive up and spent 3 days at a trade show, then Thursday visiting clients in the Chicago/Rockford area. Drove home Friday and we packed up the Pilot to go camping Father's Day weekend at Fern Cliffe S.P. in IL.
My son brought two friends who had never been camping before and we even brought one of our dogs to see how he would do.
Fern Cliffe has amazing trails and scenery:
The RV sites were really nice and big. No hookups on the sites except electric, but for our popup, it's perfect. The weather was superb. The nicest, almost perfect camping weather my wife and I have ever had. Back home it was hot and storming all weekend.
Our dog did
amazing, he can be a really yappy idiot so I was a little worried. He loved the trails and was so good.
He loved the trip and slept like a rag doll on my wife's lap the whole trip home.
My son captured a couple of really cool pics of Sat. night's cooking fire after I tossed more logs on after dinner:
We got home around 1pm Father's Day so the other boys could spend time with their dads who I coach LAX with. Monday morning I had to leave at 1pm to head to Muscatine, IA. Stopped in Peoria on the way to have dinner with friends, then rolled into the hotel around 11pm.
I came home Wed. afternoon after stopping in St. Louis to meet with another client.
T-storms rolled in Thurs. night or Fri. morning and it was supposed to be nicer on Saturday, but it rained on and off almost all day. I had a project I was planning to get done on the camper on Saturday so I went out and bought some new #10 x 1/2" SS pan head screws. But before I could do that I had to wash the camper. i bought a couple of brushes to make it easier, then hit Advance Auto Parts on my way home for new car wash and wax.
I tried the TurtleWax MAX wash since it said you can vary the concentration to get bugs and grease off. I also picked up the TurtleWax ICE wash & shine plus the ICE spray on wax. I wish they had the ICE sealer, but AAP didn't carry it. I'll grab it before I wash the camper with the ICE w7s...
The TurtleWax MAX at a very high concentration did an amazing job on the camper! It was lightly raining when I washed it, but it had to be done and I didn't have time to wait for the rain to pass. This was the first step in my plan of getting the camper really clean and waxed.
I don't think our camper has ever looked this white! I really can't wait to see it after I hit with a second washing with the MAX followed by the ICE s&w.
Today it was raining on and off, but I needed to replace the old, rusted trim screws so I jumped on the opportunity to get it done during a break in the rain clouds.
I had to use my Dremel to slot about half of the rusty screws so I could get them out.
I used a little bit of 100% silicone sealer in each hole before I put in the new, larger SS screws. I wiped off the excess sealer after each screw was tightened down.
I had found the replacement narrow trim cover at the Camping World in Davenport, IA earlier in the week along with a spare tire cover. The old trim was dry, yellowed, and cracking. I wasn't sure if it might cause water damage, so I wanted it replaced.
The new trim cover is a lot more flexible and probably thinner than the OE stuff, so the bigger screw heads show a lot more than before, but I'm ok with that since the trim is more secure and sealed better with the new screws.
My folks were amazed how much better it looks and my wife was happy with the work too.
I'm starting to shop for a new awning. The awning is sewn into the storage bag. Our awning is actually in really good shape, but the storage bag is trashed. at some point on a future camping trip, the storage bag's zipper is going to completely tear off or break. When that happens I will have to remove it from the camper and toss it in the dumpster. I've thought about just taking it off now, but it's too handy not have one on the camper. Especially when it's raining.
With the trim cover replaced, the last things I want to upgrade in the camper are the two license plate lights to LED ones, replace the stair light with a LED light, and upgrade the interior dome lights to dimmable LED units. Oh, and new curtains. We need new curtains. I'm just going to buy light blocking navy curtains from Walmart and sew in the little tabs from the original ones so I can put the new curtains up.
I haven't decided if I'm going to mess with the faded, chipping decals on the side of the camper or not. I may have new decals made, or I may have a local sign shop make a wrap for each side. Cost will be the final factor in what I do. We have two couples that are interested in buying our camper when we're ready to upgrade.
And I'm ready to upgrade sooner than later. I like the little popup because it's so light, but I want a bigger bed and I'd like a newer camper that is easier to set up and take down. We put the boys in a tent so I don't need a big camper, just one with a queen size bed. I'm looking at a few different options for the next camper, but I don't think we'll actually buy anything until my daughter is out of college.
The Pilot is rated to tow 4500lbs with a 450lb max tongue weight. I need to add the helper air bags and Monroe load leveling shocks to the Pilot, along with a brake controller when we upgrade the camper. The campers on my short list are hard sided A-frame popups with dormers, a NuCamp TAB 400, a Little Guy Max, or a Rpod. The Rpods appear to actually be the lowest cost option for new campers and the rear kitchen floor plan checks all the boxes for my wants list. If I come across a 2-3 year old used model next year, I may just have to jump on it if the price is right. I'll also be doing my research on the Rpods between now and then too. Winnebago has a nice little mini single axle camper with a queen bed, but up until 2018, they didn't have much ground clearance and were prone to breaking off their real stabilizers when backing up even slightly sloped hills. My driveway has a decent slope so I know I would break them off, or worse, break off the sewer drain. Right now, all the used ones are older than 2017 models.