mreidsma wrote:Just have to say, this has been my favorite trailer project on here for the past year or so. So many cool new ideas for me to try on my next one!
(Although I suspect my wife would like me to finish the first one before I start a second one.
So that's what I need to keep me from working on my second one before I've finished the first? A wife? Where do I sign up for one of those? ;-)
But thanks! That's nice to hear, especially after what has been a frustrating week. Don't know if I mentioned, but harbor freight messed up the title on the trailer, so getting it registered with the DMV has been a little problematic. At this point they're issuing me a new one and having it airmailed to me. So hopefully I'll get it registered next week, in time for my tentative leave date of next Saturday. But it means that camping is out of the question this weekend, even if I did manage to get it ready for the first shakedown tomorrow, which isn't even close.
Not that I would have been able to anyway, since it turns out that the hitch installation I thought I had on the books for today is actually for next Thursday, since it'll take that long for the part to come in. Welp. I guess that gives me a bit longer to research non uhaul places to get it done, but, honestly, I actually did get a couple of quotes for it, and one was probably similar (they said $100-150 to install it once I obtained the kit myself, and we didn't talk electrical, so that probably brings the figure up into the ballpark of even), and the other quote I got was significantly higher. Such is the pain of owning an old SAAB in Northern Virginia. I might, as was mentioned, be able to bring that down a bit if I source parts myself, but honestly, with everything else I've got going on getting ready to leave and how far any kind of automotive work is out of my wheelhouse, I'm thinking I'll just bring it to the people who do this all the time and *just* do this all the time and let them handle it.
The bright side of not going on the trip this weekend is that I don't have to work on the specific things to get it road worthy and can jump around a bit. So, last night, after getting the coat of white exterior aint on the body of the trailer that should serve as a final coat for most of it, I spent some quality time sculpting the cooler.

This is before I realized that something went wrong in my measurements and it was slightly too tall and had to cut it down. The lid doesn't meet the body quite as nicely as it does in this picture. But the bottom is contoured to fit the tray that it'll be sitting on that'll be attached to the drawer slides, so it should be all good.
I had been planning on putting a drain in the bottom for emptying water out, but I think that is getting cut. Just too many things to do and too little time. Plus, I'll be making a tray to keep things up out of the water that should make it easier to remove things from the cooler anyway, so that should help make tipping the water out not such a big deal... just pull everything out, set it on the counter, tip the cooler out and set the tray back in.
Planning on fiberglassing the inside tonight. Will be my first time ever using fiberglass, but a big part of the point of the cooler is to do this for the first time to get a sense of how hard it is so that I know how much I like or hate it going into the planning for my second trailer. I'm... possibly kind of excited, honestly, although I imagine it's all going to be a bit of a mess.
Haven't settled on what's going to go on the surface of the fiberglass... I don't know to what extent it needs to be food safe, since everything in there is always going to be in containers. Is there any reason I can't just throw some white spray paint on there? Or even get a can of some white rustoleum enamel? I had planned on using the rustoleum tub and tile refinishing kit, since I've used it before and it gives such a nice finish, but I don't think I have the time for that at this point. Would rather just grab something I can throw on there...
Also got the back hatch up yesterday, and now am working on the latch for it. I think, though, I'm going to need to slightly adjust where the hinge is attached to the body, which means a ton of drilling and screwing, but should be straightforward. So that's coming along.
Bought the accent paint for the outside, today, too! I went with a bright blue and a bright green that should mesh well intensity-wise with the red of the trailer base. So that's exciting. Finalizing what I want the design to look like in my head. It's a little more complicated that I was first planning, because I need more distraction higher up on the trailer than I had thought I would. But it should be doable. Need to wait at least three days for the paint to cure before the frog tape says that it's safe to apply it, though. Plus, I need to get the canvas on the back hatch and the doors, which means I need to finish the back hatch and the doors... So much to do!
Also, I'm considering getting a can or two of the rustoleum automotive gloss spray and giving the whole thing a coat of that just for the sheen... anyone used that before? How did it turn out?
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