Had friends over last night till after midnight.
I was up at 5am again, as my back was protesting to the fact that I had spent yesterday on the teardrop.
By 7am I was off to a couple of bootfairs , in search of bargains.
I was home by 10am and feel that I had done pretty will.
There was a guy with a bunch of stuff, and no idea what it was worth, suits me.
The paint brushes were £1 and £2 respectively, and will be painting the teardrop when I get to painting it.
There were a bunch of single 12V LED's, they should work well as mini downlighters. Some gearknobs , one which I will be modifying to be the handle on the galley hatch , the other for my mate Brian Box for his 1957 Splitty.
The red gearknob will be used on my Transit, which of course has a collumn shift.
I also got 4 sets of "Blue Dots" for tail lights, which I will be sharing with mates for the old "HotRod" look.
Lastly I got a speaker grille, heavy, and metal with chrome, guess it could be vintage VW , which will be making its way into the inside of the Teardrop as part of the entertainment centre, maybe a speaker grille.
All this stuff came to £7.00 which felt like a bargain.
The set of clips will probably hold back the cooker or a shelf front.
The gearshifter handle which will be modified to be Galley Hatch opening handle.
My personal favourite of the day was a "Record Vice grip , no83 " which came in at a whole £5.00. Perfect for the new house, imagine it mounted on a length of RSJ, concreted into the ground, being able to manage the forceful leverage on sometimes needs to use.
Back home Nicola and I had tea and toast, as she chose to stay home in bed while I went bargain hunting.
Then it was back to the tear, I tidied up the rebates I had cut last night, also belt sanded the flat surfaces, and then started fitting them as "fillets" to the profile. I also added about 3 or 4 screws to each of the pieces of wood, despite the clamps and wood glue.
Later I unpacked the small table saw I bought off EBay about 5 months ago, and assembled it.
I then used it to trim the 38mm timber strips to 20mm, as this is the thickness I am going to insulate at.
What a bargain at £75.00 on Ebay.
I also cleaned up the Oak bannisters I had picked up from one of the hospitals I work at when they were doing a refurb. Most were loaded with brass screws which had their heads break off if you tried to undo them, but at least I got to save some of it.
Self Portrait, as Nicola had gone to her place to work in the garden.
The recycled Oak..... once of thse strips will be the carrier for the Galley hatch as it can carry so much load.
http://i294.photobucket.com/albums/mm90 ... 070771.jpg
Well, after returning the sides to the garage , I added screws to the 2nd side of the trailer's fillets.
I would hope to get back to this next weekend, and maybe even have it standing up on its own.
I really have my building MOJO back now, Thankfully.
PS: Sorry guys/gals .... I did try get the photos converted to Tinypic, but seem to have failed there.
Tried again this morning, done

Greetings from England.
Rian.
Hoping to get it all done in time.