Goal: simple day to day life, small(ish), offroad capable – a Jeep Gladiator build

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cug

Rank II

Enthusiast III

473
San Jose, CA, USA
First Name
Guido
Last Name
GNE
So far we have mounted the heater unit just to the Canopy Camper skin. Since this is fairly thin aluminium, we decided to support the heater with brackets mounted to the side extrusions:

IMG_6481.jpeg

This should be fine now even on corrugated roads.

Tomorrow we'll bring a whole bunch of parts to a local shop for powdercoating.
 

cug

Rank II

Enthusiast III

473
San Jose, CA, USA
First Name
Guido
Last Name
GNE
And powdercoated:


IMG_6485.jpeg

We'll install most of them over the weekend, then the door and the heater will be DONE. ;-)

And a massive shout-out to our local powdercoater JIP Finishing!

They turned this around in 24h with amazing quality at a very reasonable price. If you are in the SF Bay Area and need something powdercoated, give them a call:

JIP Finishing

I have no relation to them other than being a very happy customer!
 

cug

Rank II

Enthusiast III

473
San Jose, CA, USA
First Name
Guido
Last Name
GNE
Today we started installing some of the new parts. We wanted to move the Redvision Display to the door panel since it's hard to reach inside the camper, so that's what we started with.

Unfortunately, we had to take out the GP Factor panel and even take it apart to get to the ethernet cable for the display. Used the opportunity to also get some additional wiring in the camper done to get power to the passenger side which we'll need for the water pump, the UV water filter system, the Webasto heater, and the travel oven. So far, so good, but that's why the progress looks really small ...

IMG_6434.jpeg

Redvision display moved:

IMG_6487.jpeg

And the mounting spot in the GP Factor unit properly covered:

IMG_6488.jpeg
 
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cug

Rank II

Enthusiast III

473
San Jose, CA, USA
First Name
Guido
Last Name
GNE
Very neat and professional job. Nice.
Thank you, we work very hard to get to professional (or better) looking and working results. We've seen so many "professional" jobs that are totally whacky, it's really not fun anymore. Even reputable companies cut a lot of corners to meet reasonable price expectations, or charge insane amounts and then still deliver work that isn't up to standard.

Although it is kind of ridiculous that for most things we bought, we could have build better items or done a better job installing. It's frustrating sometimes.
 

Dimitri_Raptis

Rank IX
Launch Member
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Trail Mechanic I

13,638
Riyadh, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
First Name
Dimitri
Last Name
Raptis
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22608

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Very neat and professional job. Nice.
Thank you, we work very hard to get to professional (or better) looking and working results. We've seen so many "professional" jobs that are totally whacky, it's really not fun anymore. Even reputable companies cut a lot of corners to meet reasonable price expectations, or charge insane amounts and then still deliver work that isn't up to standard.

Although it is kind of ridiculous that for most things we bought, we could have build better items or done a better job installing. It's frustrating sometimes.
Fully agree. Most upgrades and project I do my self. Especially electrical.
 
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