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Well, here's my summer side job (camper) - Page 4

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  1. #61
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    I had to do a slide in truck camper a few weeks ago. I was actually going to use it, but when we lowered it onto the trailer to take it home, it sort of imploded. I ended up dismantling it at my grandparents' farm. My 80 year old grandpa was still out there kicking butt helping to strip it, but my grandma has alzheimer's and she thought it was hers! My God, was that a mess. Thankfully she forgot about it the next day.

    If I had a rewind button, I would take it out to the middle of a field, dump some kerosene on it, and nail it with a flare.



  2. #62
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    There are allot of old RVs like that in our neighborhood. One guy converted an RV like yours into a flatbed and started hauling cars with it. He did all the dismantling on City Streets and left most of the wood. Another guy buys them at auction for around $900 most don't run then he rents them out to homeless people. He tows them to new parking spots every 24-36 hours and runs a gen set for electricity. I think he has a fleet of 15-20 they call them auto ranchers.

    Last edited by street_sweeper; 04-10-2012 at 12:57 AM.

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  4. #63
    newattitude started this thread.
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    40 hour mark

    Ok, so I commandeered one brother and a son to help today because I am SICK. OF. THIS. THING already. I can't sleep thinking about this dang camper. My plan *was* - and dang if I didnt think I'd be totally finished with this thing today, was to have it all cut and the engine and tranny out and ready to be sold. Ha. Jokes on me today. We moved it up out of the trees, had to take out 2 trees and I think it was one stump or it could have been two - I'm so tired and this point I can't even remember. I used my side grinder to finish the roof and used the torches to cut the frame. Moved the torches over to the camper, got both bumpers off and wouldn't ya know we are out of oxygen .
    So, outside gas tank got cut off (two straps and two bolts held it on, yeah that was weird), we emptied and removed the radiator, lights and all wiring left that we could get to. had to pull the flooring off in sections with the tractor after we loosened it up with crow bars and a pick ax (gotta use whats available!) and spent hours just cleaning up after ourselves and burning the garbage. I swear todays pile was taller than me and I'm 5 foot tall and I have no idea how that happened with it just the floor and some other random garbage tossed on the burn pile. So, oxygen tank will be exchanged Weds and Saturday we plan to finish torching it and having the motor and tranny ready to be picked up by buyer. Never freaking again folks, never again. . One gas tank left to cut off, LP tank left to remove and then the frame and drop the engine and tranny. guy was gonna buy the drive shaft if it was one piece but its 2 piece so he doesn't want it. Fine by me, I'm ready to push this thing over the cliff and thats probably the tired talking but thats what I'm feeling right now considering 90% of this was done by hand- a drill, an ax and finally a side grinder once I got electric back there.





  5. #64
    gustavus is offline Metal Recycling Entrepreneur
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    The rear end could net you some serious cash.

  6. #65
    newattitude started this thread.
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    You think so biscuit? I have no idea about these things. Maybe i'll list it on CL and if anyone wants to buy it they can come look at it and pick it up themselves. Do you know how I would go about figuring out a value for it?

  7. #66
    newattitude started this thread.
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    To date scrap run turn ins on this thing:


    Steel: 2098 lbs

    sheet aluminum: 121 lbs

    Extrusion: 80 lbs

    Contractor wire: 24 lbs

    #2 wire: 82 lbs

    301 SS: 24 lbs

    Al/Cu Rads: 13 lbs (from AC)

    Transformers: 26 lbs

    Die cast: 20 lbs

    Electric motors: 27 lbs

    I'll do a final tally after its totally finished but I wont have the weight on the engine and tranny since thats being sold but I'm guessing those two items together = between 700lbs to 800 lbs.

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  9. #67
    gustavus is offline Metal Recycling Entrepreneur
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    Quote Originally Posted by newattitude View Post
    You think so biscuit? I have no idea about these things. Maybe i'll list it on CL and if anyone wants to buy it they can come look at it and pick it up themselves. Do you know how I would go about figuring out a value for it?

    Where the rear plate is bolted on you'll find a tag held on held between two of the bolts, for instance the numbers on this tag indicate a gear ratio of 3.50.

    With fuel prices what these are the 3.50 / 3.75 ratio's are preferable over 4.11, even if you have the higher ratio there's always the possiblility it's a posi or limitied slip which are always good sellers regardless.

    If the differenctial has 4.11 gears the new owner could still swap in a lower ratio for better millage, google the numbers from that tag to find out what you have. Then agian of the new owner did a lot of Mountain driveing he would prefer a ratio of 4.11 / 4.56

    Here are some excamples of prices, ring and pinion $1200.00, Carrier $700.00

    Last edited by gustavus; 04-15-2012 at 11:41 AM.

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  11. #68
    gustavus is offline Metal Recycling Entrepreneur
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    If your rims are not of the split type they'll have good resale value. Check the tire size 16 inch or 16.5

    Split rims have been outlawed and guys are always looking for the non split to replace their outlawed rims.

    Here's an excample of a split rim.


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  13. #69
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    Thanks newattitude! You have given me inspiration too embark on a similiar journey...Of not one, but two motor homes! They are 1978's Dodge concords....Here we go!

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    Quote Originally Posted by ripitapart View Post
    Thanks newattitude! You have given me inspiration too embark on a similiar journey...Of not one, but two motor homes! They are 1978's Dodge concords....Here we go!
    If they are the big class A style then those are setting on a big truck/bus chassis. Her's was a class C chassis on a 1 ton frame. Here is an early Concord, it is a Class A. Lot more frame/weight there.


    Here is a motorhome museum of pictures of motorhomes by year, if interested.
    http://www.kwyjibo.com/rv/
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  15. #71
    newattitude started this thread.
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    Quote Originally Posted by ripitapart View Post
    Thanks newattitude! You have given me inspiration too embark on a similiar journey...Of not one, but two motor homes! They are 1978's Dodge concords....Here we go!
    Good luck! If you learned anything from my experience I hope you have bigger and better tools than I do/did! If you can, keep us posted how yours are going along!

  16. #72
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    Quote Originally Posted by newattitude View Post
    Good luck! If you learned anything from my experience I hope you have bigger and better tools than I do/did! If you can, keep us posted how yours are going along!
    If someone asks you to scrap one now you know to charge them about $500. plus the scrap. Once you get good at it it gets easier. Kinda like riding a bike. lol

  17. #73
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    Mechanic, you are NOT kidding!!

    Well, my mom was crabbing about it sitting and I couldn't get to it because of rain so what you see in the last picture at the 40 hour mark got hauled away for $225.00 smackeroo's minus one gas tank and the rest of the wiring and some other stuff I managed to get off. I'm posting total weights of everything else I turned in and if anyone can guess the weight of whats left you can get a pretty good idea of it it's worth it for you to do if you are so inclined . Right now if anyone said to me ''You wanna scrap a camper?'' my answer would be NOOOOOO!! Lol. I might change my mind once the ''Holy friggin cow'' mentality wears off .

    I figured for my first time I learned a lot and I didn't do too bad considering I had baby tools (no big munching machines lol) and no electric for the first 3/4's of the job.

    The keys are in my tool box at my dads for souvenir and to admire every once in a while and to say ''I actually scrapped a vehicle!''

    I want to thank everyone that gave me advice and answered all my questions - you all ROCK!!!! *Blows kisses* Thanks for following my progress and I hope this helps someone down the line.

    Out of the original 11,000 lbs of weight for this thing I am shocked at how much was garbage, a LOT of it was burned or taken to the street and I never knew fiberglass was so heavy!

    The only metal I might be off on is a piece of the metal flooring that got hauled to the fire pile to burn the subflooring off. I pulled out one of the pieces but the burn remnant pile is so big and it was still hot at the time I can't find it and my dad already pushed the pile over with the tractor to tighten it up (thanks dad!).


    Steel - 3124 lbs

    sheet aluminum: 268 lbs

    Extrusion: 102 lbs

    Contractor wire: 40 lbs

    #2 wire: 82 lbs

    #2 Copper: 8 lbs (I was kinda shocked on that one)

    Faucets: 2 lbs

    301 SS: 24 lbs

    Al/Cu Rads: 13 lbs (from AC)

    Radiator from engine: 28 lbs

    Transformers: 26 lbs

    Die cast: 20 lbs

    Old Cast: 34 lbs

    Electric motors: 27 lbs

    Romex: 15 lbs

    Brass: 8 lbs

    Batteries: (2)


    Garbage = all wood framing and 2 x 4's, subflooring, foam insulation, some type of plastic (?) / rock composite that was the counter tops in kitchen area (Lots of it and it was heavy as heck), wood doors, paneling, all fiberglass from the body - front and back, tub, potty, carpet, window curtains, mattresses from couch and bunk bed above cab and any foam and coverings on the captains chair of which there were four.

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  19. #74
    newattitude started this thread.
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    Oh, wanted to tell you all how I dealt with the window glass too. I had to bust the glass out since it just wouldn't come out of the framing even with taking the screws out and the frames were all once piece shaped in the window shape. I had saved a couple of the nicer, thicker umbrella coverings when I took them apart - the ones you see on peoples decks in the middle of the tables. Well, I didn't have anything big enough to set some of the larger windows in so what I did was set the umbrella covering on the floor opened up and put a window on one half of it and then folded the cloth over the window and busted the glass with a hammer through the cloth. Any shards were also scraped out over the cloth. Once all the windows were done I then folded the cloth up like a burrito and put it all into a box which I taped real good before putting out to the road. This worked perfectly, the glass stayed contained and no shards went flying to possibly get into someones eyes and clean up was easy as pie to roll it all up! now, it was heavy as heck and I had to use a dolly to wheel it to the road but I thought it was an ingenious way to use something I got from scrapping to help with another scrapping project!

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    Quote Originally Posted by hobo finds View Post
    I wouldnt bother removing all the screws from the siding, I would get one of those circle cut drill bits and cut over the screw. Leave the screw in the wood frame with the little bit of alum. Much faster tear down.
    Are you talking about a hole saw? Or is this a tool I am not aware of?

    Have some steel/aluminum I want to separate that's held with rivets. Was grinding them off but wondered if a hole saw would be better.

    On another note, I just finished cutting up a step van using a Diablo 7 1/4" 40 tooth finish blade. Cuts like a hot knife through butter. No need to buy an expensive specialty blade. One blade got most of the van down to managable pieces. Bought a 2nd to finish up. So for those that need to cut sheet, extrusion, ect, this works very well. Blade is $15 at Home Depot. Picked up another circular saw, Ryobi, for $40. I am liking it so far.

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