Log of the Lance 1140's life with us.

Sunday, June 11, 2017

Texted the owner. She was busy, and said that she'd get back to me in a few days. Asking price is $6,000 with another $1,500 for the truck it's sitting on. (So not interested!)

Wednesday, June 14, 2017

She contacted me, and we agreed on Sunday noon for a look-see. She wouldn't be there, but her son Cole would.

Sunday, June 18, 2017

We got there, and sons Cole and Steve were on hand. The camper was very dirty, and had clearly been neglected for some time. It has numerous problems:
  1. Filthy
  2. Missing, but presumably find-able, are:
    1. Title
    2. keys
    3. electric jack remote
  3. Propane tanks, regulator, and plumbing to the first tee are all missing. (Stolen for a cooking trailer, since sold.) So, no gas-powered accessories are even demonstrable. Especially the generator.
  4. Side awning's end cap is missing, things are loose and floppy as a result. (Looks like a $20 part.) Its crank handle is broken, but repairable.
  5. Fantastic fan's housing is gone. Open to the sky it is.
  6. One jack motor supposedly doesn't work. But has crank handle.
  7. Dinette's rear window shade is destroyed
  8. Water heater and pump "need servicing"
  9. Water has clearly gotten into the under-bed area, it's corroded and sagging. This is by far the most disturbing flaw.

No doubt there's more, as yet undiscovered.

On the neutral side:

  1. Roof-mount TV antenna
  2. No cold-weather package (tank insulation, primarily)
  3. Over-dinette bunk.

On the plus side:

  1. A newer (than ours) Lance, the long version, with the one-piece metal roof.
  2. Dry bathroom. (Separate shower stall.)
  3. Generator
  4. AC
  5. Awnings (2)
  6. External shower
  7. Electric jacks
  8. Microwave oven
  9. Sliding pantry rack.

I would have preferred the 1130 model because of the floor plan, more like our existing camper's, the 1140 I find to be just a bit weird, feeling more cramped inside though it is not in fact any smaller. Just laid out differently. But, this is what was available, and we're kind of sick of looking.

I deemed it acceptable in spite of its flaws, and we settled on a price of $5,250, to be picked up the next weekend. (The flaws explained the more reasonable asking price. Still far too high, in the opinions of some. I guess we'll see in time.)

The truck, of no interest to us, is a steaming pile. A recovered parts car, a snowbird special. Chevy, gas, automatic, 2wd, dually. Beat-up inside and out. Extremely no-interest!

Thursday, June 22, 2017

I picked up the funds at the bank.

Saturday, June 24, 2017

I printed out the Washington Declaration of Buyer and Seller Regarding Value of Used Vehicle Sold (Dept. of Revenue) form to fill out, just in case this will apply to a camper. I do not want to be taxed as if it sold for high Blue Book value! According to the DMV trolls, a Bill of Sale is not good enough to establish the taxable value.

I also printed out the RV plug wiring diagram. We're planning to rewire the plug at pickup so we have turn and brake lights. I packed up a tool kit for doing this, along with a spare 7-pin plug for the camper end of the cable.

Because the title is missing the Sheriff has to come verify the VIN, so we postponed the pickup until tomorrow.

Sunday, June 25, 2017

We went to pick up the camper. They'd continued cleaning it, it looked pretty good. I spent some quality time with cutters and a wiring diagram, putting on the right connector for our truck. Got it first time, all the lights worked right when I tried it out. The electric jacks were flakey, there's going to need to be some work done there, but we prevailed. There's always the crank...

I had only been able to find three of the four tiedowns for the old camper, so we were one short for the trip home. The tiedowns seem to be more truck-specific rather than camper-specific, the ones for the Chevy the camper had been on were all too long. The ones for our truck fit perfectly, and were what we used.

It was warm when we got home, so I spent some quality time with the AC on in the camper. It blew out a lot of dead bugs at first, but was working fine.

Monday, June 26, 2017

I brought the camper by RnR RV to order parts. I bought a new cover for the Fantastic fan. Unfortunately the crank assembly is missing, so it won't be secured down. She suggested that I shop around for the propane tanks, their price (≈ $250 each) was pretty high. I bought a replacement rear door latch, that's much cheaper than taking the one we have to the locksmith. I bought a new marker light lens too, and a battery isolator relay. I'll need to rewire the camper a bit to match what I had with the old camper.

Unfortunately I couldn't put the hatch cover on, we had to fetch Jill home from her ill-fated Yakima trip and didn't get back 'til late. I had placed a board over the open hatch, which was good since it had rained while we were gone.

Tuesday, June 27, 2017

I removed the remains of the old fan cover and put on the new one. It looks nice and fits, but will flop open and closed with the wind until we get a new lifting arm.

I fooled with the broken awning, and discovered what is wrong. The end of the casing has gotten a bit tweaked, and a corner of the plastic endpiece is broken off. This keeps it from closing properly, and it had gotten loose enough that the roller had popped out of its socket at the far end, making things even worse. Eventually I got it pieced together well enough that it fits better and opens and closes more or less normally. I had to find a screw to secure the endpiece, of the three that should be there two were missing—one because its mounting hole is gone too! I'll need to order a new plastic end cap, and the plastic cover that goes over the crank mechanism. The mechanism itself is fine. (Turns out the parts are not separately available, if they are even available at all.)

The new door latch assembly is an exact match for the original, except that it's made in China and not the US. Fit and finish are not as good. I determined that the original interior handle was superior, especially as concerns the deadbolt, so I kept those parts. The new exterior handle is shiny and not pebbled, which means it shows greasy fingerprints immediately, but that's the price of getting two keys that work. As of now the camper can be secured.

I popped on the new marker lens. It might not stay, the base is missing a piece. A spot of glue?

I dug around in the old camper and found the other water heater hatch flipper lever. (They make you buy a 2-pack.) That was an easy fix.

The facade on the sliding drawer under the dinette was coming loose from the drawer. I removed it and glued hardwood sticks into the hogged-out screw holes, and left it to dry.

Wednesday, June 28, 2017

I replaced the light bulb in the refrigerator and cleaned the switch. That looks good now. The freezer compartment is smelly, but it's more like propane than ammonia. Since there is no propane anywhere in the camper I'm assuming it's just a stinky refrigerator; not something that's unheard-of! I think I'll try a baking soda wash-down, and if that doesn't work maybe I'll put the ozone generator in there for a spell.

I could hear the relay for the malfunctioning LF electric jack clicking, so I used a battery charger to prove that the motor itself was OK. I cleaned the terminals and used DeOxIt on them, and plugged it back in. I went into the closet and disconnected the wires for the two front jacks, and swapped them. The jack worked fine when driven from the other channel, so the wiring is OK too. That means that either the relay contacts themselves are burned, or there's a bad trace or solder connection on the board. The Atwood board was made by GAMA Electronics, it's a PCB336. I have no doubt that it can be repaired, one way or another. (The clicking proves that it's only an output problem.)

Thursday, June 29, 2017

I attached the glued-up facade to the sliding drawer under the dinette. All the screws now 'bite' again. Fixed!

I then labeled the jack wires coming off the PCB336 controller board, and removed it. I had to drill out the four aluminum pop rivets that held the board to its case. Carefully! Once that was released, revealing the back side of the board, the problem was obvious: a blown ground trace to the LF jack's relay. Probably a transient short, or even more likely an extended stall session was responsible. I bridged the gap in the trace with a wire. The hardest part of this job was finding screws that would hold the board back to its case. After I put it all back I ran the jacks, all worked! I used them to lift the camper off of the truck; no problems, even under load. A shot of DeOxIt in the intermittent jack activation switch cured that issue. Lastly, I opened up the remote and used electrical tape to shim the rubber pad on the one thumb-buster switch so that it activated more easily. There, perfect!

Friday, June 30, 2017

Had a massive refrigerator cleaning session. I used baking soda in water to wash down the insides, and removed all the shelves and such and had Daniel clean them in the house with soapy water, then set aside to drip dry. I used super glue to repair the cracked frozen juice can (?) holder while it was out. After it was clean I put a fan on the refrigerator to dry everything, then re-assembled. Once it was all back together I put the automotive ozone generator in the freezer compartment to de-stinkify it.

Saturday, July 1, 2017

I checked the freezer compartment, and it seems much better. (Time will tell.) I moved the ozone generator to the bottom compartment.

I removed the exterior light switch panel from the wall and used DeOxIt on the one switch that didn't seem to be working. That fixed the right-side exterior light.

The switch for the light in the kitchen was very flakey, so I removed it from the ceiling and used DeOxIt on its switch. Better!

Sunday, July 2, 2017

I removed the ozone generator, everything smells good now.

I looked around and found the missing tiedown, so now the camper is anchored (anchorable) at all four corners.

Thursday, July 6, 2017

The freezer is still a little smelly, so today I cleaned it with bleach water, followed by a rinse, followed by more baking soda in water. I used the jacks to tip the camper to the side so that the liquid didn't want to spill out the front, that worked nicely.

The RV store had wanted circa $250 each for propane tanks, and had suggested that other suppliers might be more reasonable. I had been looking for used ones, with no luck, and online suppliers were about $190 (and up) each for new ones, shipped. Not too attractive.

...Later in the day I dropped by the Propane store, their horizontal 30# Manchester tanks were $139 each. Sold! I bought two tanks, filled, a dual switchover regulator, and two old-school handwheel hose connectors for $430. (This shop doesn't even carry the Acme thread fittings, they said they suck so bad.) I still need to get the 3/8" hose that goes from the regulator to the camper's fitting, but I need to measure the required length first. Barring unexpected disaster, we're just about done spending money to get this into usable shape.

Friday, July 7, 2017

The freezer still has a bit of a smell, so I threw the ozone generator in there again. I measured for the propane hose, it needs to be 32"×3/8", if I correctly understand what is necessary.

At lunchtime I stopped by House of Hose and had them make up what I needed to finish this off. About $20.

Saturday, July 8, 2017

I hooked up the propane system. First I disconnected the downstream lines to blow out the open lines with compressed air. Good thing I did, a mud plug shot out of one, and goo came out the other. With the propane hooked up I was able to test the stove, it worked. I tried the furnace, but no signs of life. We'll get to that later, it's not important now. The battery is weak, so I used jumper cables to hook up another one, and with that I was able to start the generator. It was able to run the air conditioner, so it seems to be fine.

The refrigerator, our most crucial summertime gas-powered appliance, is another problem. I cleaned the burner, spark terminal, and thermocouple, and I can start and get a good flame. The thermocouple outputs 31mV, which is good, but it just won't stay running on gas. Also, the 12V heater seems to be getting powered when it should not, intermittently. The control board is potted, so all I could do was use DeOxIt on its terminals, which made no difference. Looks like I need a replacement control board. Most folks recommend the Dinosaur P-711 in these cases.

Apparently this beige-potted 293-series Dometic control board is notorious for developing a flakey thermocouple circuit, and that Dinosaur sells a lot of replacements as a result.

While poking around under the sink, beginning to look into the water supply, I discovered the missing pieces from the awning. Excellent!

Sunday, July 9, 2017

I cleaned the awning pieces, and used JB Weld and a rough piece of steel as a backer to glue the corner back on the gear assembly. I used cyanoacrylate glue to close up the crack in the cover, and potted the inside with Shoe Goo. Tomorrow things should be cured enough to try reassembly, see if it holds.

I filled the water tank, and there was no flooding, so that's good. I let it drain away again. We almost certainly need a bleach regimen.

I fired up the water heater, briefly since there was no water in it. The auto-igniter worked.

The louvered window shade for the small dinette window was all messed up, and they'd taped aluminum foil over the glass to keep out light. I pulled the shade, and found that the finger that holds the tilt cords on one side was broken off. I fabricated a new finger out of scrap plastic, and Shoe-Gooed it in place. Several of the louvers are severely bent, crumpled even, I did what I could to reshape them. We'll need a new shade, but until we can find the correct one (labeled 21×21) this should do.

It was a hot sunny breezy day, so I pulled the mattress to let it air in the sun. I set it up on 2×4's to get it off the ground. While it was out I pulled the cloth privacy curtains for laundering, and vacuumed. It is very obvious that the wood under the mattress is soft and sagging. That's disturbing.

Monday, July 10, 2017

At dawn, because the wind was coming up, I installed the repaired end cap parts on the side awning. I had to bend a little metal to get things to go fully back together, but once I had finished it looked as good as new. (But weathered, of course.)

I called Lance, and they can't look up a camper that old, bummer, and don't generally carry parts that old either. I ordered a 21×21 miniblind, $53. Let's hope it fits.

I stopped by the hardware store and spent $1.60 for 3 1/2" cone seals for the plumbing. I wanted 4, but they didn't have that many.

The Fantastic fan parts came today, I installed the lever assembly and now it works.

I ordered a Dinosaur P-711 board for the refrigerator. $103.23 from Adventure RV Center, order #659675.

Tuesday, July 11, 2017

I installed the Fantastic fan parts. Looks good and works.

I filled up the water tank again, and disconnected the feed from the water pump. I cleaned out the strainer, which was full of algae, and when the tank fully filled it shot a glob of algae out of the hose into the cabinet. Ugh. Definitely going to have to do a bleach-out or something on this...

The hardware store cone seals are not the right thing. Will need to stop at the RV store instead.

So I did, and bought 4 seals for $8 (!) that looked closer to what was needed. After work I installed them, and pressurized the water system. It doesn't always build pressure, there may be gunk in the check valve.

Wednesday, July 12, 2017

I put 1/2 cup of bleach into the water tank. I fired up the water heater, and it seems to be working fine. I ran water through all the lines to eliminate the air. After the water heater shut off I had hot water at the sink. So far, so good.

I opened up the control center to see about adding a switch for the water heater, to move it to the factory location from the under-sink bodge. The switches seem to be Eaton E20M11J, which are NLA. I'm sure something can be found to work.

Thursday, July 13, 2017

I found a suitable rocker switch in the junk box. Whew!

I stopped by Costco, and bought a new battery. $80.

When I got home I installed the battery, and tried it out. It was able to start the generator with no problem.

The Dinosaur P-711 board came today, so I installed it. It's easy, but you have an extra ground lug to screw to the chassis, and they require an additional ground wire that you have to make. But, I did all that in 20 minutes or so and tried it out. It's been running on gas quite awhile now, so it seems fine.

Friday, July 14, 2017

The refrigerator has passed my testing, so I buttoned it up.

The furnace is getting power, but doesn't run. The thermostat doesn't have any voltage on its contacts. I'll have to dig into that.

Saturday, July 15, 2017

I took a closer look at the furnace. There was continuity (on the blue wires) from its connector to the thermostat. I took a closer look at the thermostat, and found that the manual shutoff lever was broken off, so that it wasn't obvious that it had been turned off entirely. When I turned it on the furnace worked. Good. I put the access covers back on. I'll probably pursue a replacement thermostat.

I found a blue and white wire bundle under the sink, and research suggests it's for the solar panels. (There's also a red and white bundle back in there.) I took a closer look up top at the refrigerator vent cover, and there is a connector there. So I guess this is 'solar ready'. I think we'll probably pursue that option at some point.

I then tackled the water system again, and I think the reason it doesn't tend to build pressure is that the input strainer is leaking air where it is cracked, probably from freezing. I can get another strainer, but I think that I can glue this one with JB Weld. I'll try that first.

Using what scanty water flow I could get I scrubbed out the bathroom. While cleaning in there I discovered that the toilet flush lever is broken. I'll have to disassemble that and fix it, or in the worst case replace it.

I removed the broken roller shades from the bunk area. It shouldn't be too hard to procure replacements.

Sunday, July 16, 2017

I put together the water system, and it still leaked air. I did what I should have done from the beginning, and put one of the better-looking old seals in the strainer, and it sealed up fine and started working correctly.

I began flushing the chlorine out of the system. It will take awhile.

Tuesday, July 18, 2017

The miniblind came today. Beige, not really what I had in mind. Oh well.

Wednesday, July 19, 2017

I stopped by RnR RV to see what they had to say about the dead roller shades from the bed area. They've got a call in.

While I was there I bought an LED replacement bulb to try out, it was the one they recommended as working the best. It's marked LB1146-48-SW, 12V–24V, Tru Lite, 420 lumens 1/2 amp. Warm White, 5 year warranty. Supplier: TLE. I put it over the dinette, as the first lamp to come on. It looks good, and seems very similar in color and brightness to the 1141 incandescent that's still in the other side. I see no reason not to get more of these. It draws 300mA, and seems to have constant light output down to a bit over 10V.

I also bought a rocker switch that fits better than my junkbox special, and it's also not marked so it matches the rest of them.

The replacement water fill caps didn't seem to have the correct vent plug, so perhaps I'll swap caps and lanyards with the old camper.

The replacement thermostats they have don't really match the Atwood we have. I'll keep looking.

Thursday, July 20, 2017

The monitor panel is a JRV 3477A, I sent an enquiry to jrvproducts@msn.com to see if they have any information I can use to hook up the water heater in a factory manner, instead of using the bodge under the sink.

I cut out a strip of heavy sheet metal and glued it over the remains of the broken-off thermostat switch. Not elegant, but it seems to work.

Friday, July 21, 2017

I sussed out the water heater switch and lamp wiring in the control center. There were two spade lugs on blue wires that had been taped off, and after tracing the wiring it looked like it was for the water heater switch. So I hooked it up. Yes, when ON the red W.H. LED goes on. Also, the blue wire that comes out of the top of the stove hood is 'hot' when this is on. And, there's a taped-off blue wire coming out of the wall. So, where does this blue wire go? Clearly it looks like it ought to be going to the water heater. But there's nothing obvious down by the water heater.

Further research showed that the blue and white wire bundle is not for the solar panel, as the ohmmeter showed direct continuity from that bundle to the lone blue wire over the range hood. So, throwing caution to the winds I cut the power feed to the under-sink power switch and hooked it to the blue wire instead, and hooked the blue wire to the blue wires that come from the main control panel switch and LED. Et voila! We have us a labeled water heater switch with indicator light that actually controls the water heater. I left the old switch and light in place, so the two switches are in series.

With that taken care of I started putting things back together. Camper's looking pretty decent inside now.

...

On the way to work I stopped at RnR and dropped $179 on LED lights, enough to upgrade the entire interior except for the one in the closet and the one in the refrigerator, and a replacement lens for the one in the kitchen that is burned.

...

After work I installed the lights. Turns out I counted wrong, so the one forward in the bed area is still incandescent. The LB1146-48-SW lamps were easy to install, of course. I bought a stick-on panel-style replacement with a T5 connector for the fan hood over the stove. I really like that one, because all the LED's are aimed the correct direction. (It's marked L1156SW, 12V–24V, Tru Lite, 288 lumens 1/4 amp. Warm White, 5 year warranty. Supplier: TLE.) They didn't have warm-white reading lamp LED's, so I bought a pair of regular white ones, small-ish, for those. (Marked L194W, 12V, Tru Lite, 160 lumens. White, 5 year warranty. I measured them at about 250mA each.) They're really quite blue-ish, it's possible that I will replace them later. We're only into those for about $10, if so.

Those were easy. Replacing the two fluorescent bulbs was a different story. The instructions were dreadful. Eventually I figured out how they were supposed to be wired, and after that it got easier. I left the ballast and wiring in place, why not, just disconnected, and I wire-nutted the new wiring in its place. The LED strips stick down where the bulbs were. They're shorter than the T12 bulbs, but it doesn't look too bad. The brightness might be a bit substandard, we'll see, and the color temperature is definitely on the cold side. (Marked LF8T, 12V, Tru Lite, 1008 lumens, 1 amp. White, 5 year warranty.) If I don't like this, it's a bit more to throw away: $34.

The mystery switch in the bathroom has been figured out: it runs the overhead lights! I didn't realize that it, like the fluorescent over the dinette, has both a wall switch and an overhead switch, in series. Doh!

I turned on all the LED lights and put an ammeter on the battery, and disconnected the shore power. 4A. Not too bad. Turning on the one remaining interior incandescent lamp pushed it up to 5.5A! I will be replacing it. I'm less sure about the three exterior lamps, they're in a more hazardous place and are likely to get wet and/or dirty. We'll see.

Saturday, July 22, 2017

I sprayed the Winegard rooftop TV antenna with Teflon lubricating spray, and that freed it up nicely. Not sure if it's worth messing with or not, but at least we can clean under it now!

I looked up the external speakers, they're Advent MARBL's, probably procured from Costco for $50. Supposedly decent enough when used outdoors.

I flushed the water tank again, probably for the last time. The water has been coming out clean, and no longer smells of chlorine.

I went to Home Depot and bought some oak trim plugs, some velcro, and a sheet of 1/2" plywood. I cut a 60-ish piece of the ply to put down under the mattress, and covered it with a scrap bedsheet for splinter-proofing. I also removed the broken dinette pedestal brace, and glued it with polyurethane glue. I set up the dinette bed, and it works well and is quite comfortable, I managed to snag a nap while I was at it.

I also bought two cheap roller shades, and had them cut to length. $20 and we now have shades in the bed area.

Since I was out I stopped by RnR and bought the last LED replacement. I bought a festoon lamp for the closet, but it turns out the bulb is not that kind, and it doesn't stay in place.

Sunday, July 23, 2017

I glued wood splinters into the holes in the dinette wall where the screws for the velcro tabs that hold the bolster against the wall have pulled out. One tab is missing, I put a stick-on in its place. Once the glue is dry I can razor off the excess and re-drill and mount the remaining tabs.

I shaved the excess glue off of the broken dinette pedestal brace, and sanded it clean. I smeared teak oil on and set it aside to dry.

I pulled the throne, and once I dumped it out I could see that the flush handle is not broken, it's merely sticky from disuse. Looking down the hole in the floor, I can see that the holding tank is... not empty. That'll be fun.

I moved the joke pay toilet sign from the old camper to the new.

Monday, July 24, 2017

I cleaned the throne out and put it back. I think it just needs exercise. I also did some miscellaneous gluing. The table is definitely a tight fit for three, and you have to have it right way 'round to even hope to fit in behind it. The smaller dinette due to the larger bathroom is definitely noticeable.

I can see where the catch for the medicine cabinet door in the bathroom is broken off. I wonder if the RV store has anything that'll fit? This is a "Jensen medicine latch", which is NLA. Badly designed, they all seem to be broken...

Tuesday, July 25, 2017

I bought a box of Rid-X and dumped half of it into the black tank, along with a couple of gallons of lukewarm water. $8.

Wednesday, July 26, 2017

I put the camper back on the truck. Our departure time is coming up fast!

Friday, July 28, 2017

The water pump stopped delivering. Turns out a huge glop of algae got sucked up into the strainer. That's what it's for!

Monday, July 31, 2017

Dumped the tanks. Nasty, but not as bad as I'd thought. The grey tank was just as cruddy/smelly as the black, though. I'm going to do another slosh and clean, using a bit of Rid-X in both tanks, then follow it up with some TSP for another slosh session. Let's hope this cleans the sensors.

Tuesday, August 1, 2017

I put some TSP into both tanks, and filled them both with water (from the on-board supply) until 3 of the four LED's were on. Should be some excellent sloshing with that kind of level. I then pumped out all the fresh water via the exterior shower, running it dry. I sucked up a lot of algae, and clogged the water pump's strainer several times. Clearly it's not clean yet! I refilled the fresh tank.

Wednesday, August 2, 2017

Flushed the fresh tank again, I'm just getting too much algae coming out. I put more bleach in and filled the tank with water half way for a good bleachy sloshing.

Thurssday, August 3, 2017

Final tank flush and fill, as we had to prep the camper for vacation tomorrow.

Friday, August 11, 2017

Pretty smelly waste tanks on our vacation, so I stopped by the RV store and dropped $41 on tank treatments and a pack of TP. ($4 of that was to replace a marker light lens that had disappeared.)

Wednesday, August 16, 2017

Jill didn't like the too-cold light from the LED in her reading lamp, so I had replaced it with the original incandescent. I ordered a different set of LED replacements, warmer this time and presumably brighter since they had more LED's on them, and they came yesterday. (These all seem to be designed for low-voltage lighting applications, like Malibu.) These draw 140mA (vs 700mA for the incandescent) and seem to have equivalent brightness and color. They're a little long, and almost protrude from the fixture, but in time we'll see if that's a practical problem or not.

Thursday, August 17, 2017

I flushed the water tank again, and had great difficulty getting it to pressurize again afterwards. I went so far as to disassemble the pump and clean it out, it mostly seemed fine inside. I suspect that the rubber bits are getting hard-ish with age, they might need replacing. I also suspect that the worst problem is that the strainer is leaking a bit. I think a new strainer is in order, styrene is just not a good body material.

With a second rubber gasket I was able to get a better seal, and it pressurized again.

Sunday, September 3, 2017

The replacement strainer came, along with the little pressure tank. Both are installed now, and things seem OK. The new strainer's body is heavy black plastic, only its bowl is brittle styrene. It should hold up better. The pressure tank came without its connecting hose, so I procured a hard fitting in its place. The fitting means you have to screw the tank and pump together out from under the sink, but the wires just reach. The tank's presence means that the pump had to be relocated some.

The camper's title and old keys finally came in the mail, so we can get the paperwork straightened out.

Monday, August 26, 2019

I finally found the dead mouse that was in there, it was laying in the tray that's part of the front window valence. I pulled it out and washed it multiple times with bleachy water, and Simple Green. Sun and air dried, and it finally smells right again.

The valence pulled right out, without removing the four wood screws. The wood is rotted there, too. I think the front window leaks badly, and that's why the under-bed area is so soft. Needs reconstruction. I called Truline RV, a place that does this locally, and the guesstimate over the phone was about a week of work, and $5,000 or so. (He said they do lots of this kind of thing.) Not Cheap!

And too much, considering the value of the camper. It'll just be patch jobs as necessary, I guess.

Tuesday, July 7, 2020

We cleaned up the camper and got it ready for our upcoming trip. This time I didn't forget to hook up the water pump's feed hose before I filled the tank, and thus avoided the flood. In fact there were no problems, everything came up just fine.

Friday, January 13, 2023

The (failing) 2017 house battery did not recover under my tender ministrations, so I replaced it with a new one from Costco. About $100.

Thursday, August 17, 2023

while cleaning out the camper recently, getting ready for our family gathering this weekend, I discovered that the front window valence was coming down. Investigation showed that the wood around the front window is rotted away, not doubt due to water incursion from the roof somewhere. Disgusted I pulled open the surface veneer where it was worst, and pulled out all the rotted wood that came out with fingers. At the store I bought a can of spray foam insulation, and dug around in the scrap piles to get some sticks of wood. Yesterday I packed them into the hole, making sure there was a good broad flat piece where the two valence screws went, and shot spray insulation in to lock everything in place.

Today I used a razor blade to trim away all the foam insulation mushrooms sticking out, glued the paint-finished veneer back with contact cement, and re-attached the valence. Looks good (enough) again, and should hold for at least this trip. The patching is uuuuug-ly, but it all hides behind the valence.

Thursday, September 21, 2023

Winterized.

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