twisted lines wrote:The way I am reading this;
You Have explained to her, I only need your spot in the garage for a couple weekends
Is that realistic?
KTM_Guy wrote:...What do you have for space to work in? If I had a 40X60 space to work I could have save a lot of time. I worked in a two car garage. And a lot in the driveway. Even though you don’t need a lot of tools to build a camper it sure makes it easier....
working on it wrote:
- My trailer build was sorta pre-planned, prior to joining the forum, which I did three days after I loaded my derelict frame onto my car-hauler trailer, and took it to a distant location to work on it. There, I would have room to work on it, a wide array of tools that I could use, a friend that wanted to help, and where I could hide it from the wife (hidden mainly for the cost). That distance back-fired on me, causing the "projected" build schedule duration of 6-9 months, to be almost quadrupled, as I first had it campable after 22 months, and camped in it just two weeks shy of two years of building. How many hours were spent working on it there, were probably not even close to the hours wasted.
- I had done several automotive projects at home, that stayed pretty close to schedule & budget before, but this "hidden" trailer project was unlike any other one, and certainly the distances involved contributed to that. The trailer build was started 50 miles from my home, and 90 from my job, or 110 from work-to-home-then to the trailer, if I stopped-by home to get parts when going from work to the trailer build site; or in other words, it was pretty damn distant from my position whenever I wanted to work on it, and it drove me crazy. I'd come up with a new wrinkle I wanted to try, or to get some measurements, and never could...until the next weekend, if then. And I couldn't always work on it, even when I had time; when my friend was gone, or during much of the week, or weekend, I often couldn't get to it. It didn't help that I was working/commuting 12-16 hours a day, on call 24/7/365, or that when I showed up to work on it, I'd often be sidetracked to help on another project, while there. That pattern went on for 11 months, even when I tried working on it for a full week of vacation time, from sunup-midnite, during three weeks of that period.
- I carried a notepad in my pocket for those eleven months, jotting down ideas as best I could, without ready access to the trailer, but I wasn't happy with the progress...there is no substitute for having the trailer close at hand. I decided to 95% complete the exterior, with the shell finished & painted, doors & hatch all sealed & lockable, with no interior done (except for the on-board generator). Then, suddenly w/o warning, I withdrew the trailer from my friend's shop and took it home, mad at my friend for delaying the build, but madder still at myself for missing my goal. I appreciated his help at first, where his skill was much needed, but as I got better at it, and he became less interested in it, it became apparent that it was not to my best interests to remain working on it there any longer.
- My original planning was probably inadequate for the semi-off road future I had envisioned for the TTT, but I would've taken steps to replace the weaknesses, as soon as I could, as I did later on my replacement suspension. But, I would've been camping earlier on, and able to use the time (and money) spent traveling to the trailer site to better effect, and the strain put on our friendship may never have developed?? In any case, building my TTT at a distant site cost too much time and money, just on commuting, and caused bad feelings to germinate; no hobby should put a strain on one, much less all, of those categories... which are pretty much the same reasons I gave up drag-racing ten years ago. But, working alone at home ever since, even when repairs or modifications have been rushed, needing to be done in a hurry, I found out that every hour spent is enjoyable, if only for the opportunity to just be "working on it".
swoody126 wrote:as i mature (translate to gaining more gray hair) i find projects taking 3x the amount of time it should have
you young whipsersnapsters are still in the WFO mode and should be able to force yourself thru projects like this in just 2x the amount of time projected
with a coffee pot and an "engineering chair" in the barn i find myself savoring the process to be as much fun as most anything i do during the process
projects do take on different aspects(improvements ±) as time is spent witha cuppa whilst sitting in the chair ;-)
it's more enjoyable to savor the build than to run thru it on some kinda schedule
bits n pieces of the buiding process have the ability to enhance your personal pride in accomplishment
IMHO once road-able it will offer pleasant respites from the next journey/project
otherwise you can take your coins and buy one already made and put the extra change in your pocket for gas and simply hit the road,,,
rather than waiting unti April why knot get started NOW and ease yourself thru it
just this old mans 25¢ worth this morning
sw
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