Home away from Home, on wheels.
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This forum is specifically intended for you to post generic questions related to a repair.
If your question is specific to a project, or your VW please post in your VW's Garage Space.
- ObnoxiousBlue
- Site Admin
- Posts: 1424
- Joined: Tue Sep 09, 2008 5:23 pm
- First Name: Mike
- Vehicle Year: 1964
- Model: Beetle
- Location: Above ground...
- Contact:
Re: Home away from Home, on wheels.
Is there blood on my bus?
Is your head ok?
I know there will be enough space to flip the tire, no problem. Seeing as either way its mounted it will be snug up against the front of the bus. I just need to find out where I can buy the metric hardware/lugs to pull it all together.
Is your head ok?
I know there will be enough space to flip the tire, no problem. Seeing as either way its mounted it will be snug up against the front of the bus. I just need to find out where I can buy the metric hardware/lugs to pull it all together.
Re: Home away from Home, on wheels.
This is where I got my metric centerpin reamer . They will give you a rod Mike and they are local. Let me measure it up and get it figured out. Then we'll get it from them.
http://www.metricmcc.com/catalog/Ch1/1-114.pdf
http://www.metricmcc.com/catalog/Ch1/1-114.pdf
Re: Home away from Home, on wheels.
Time is never on my side so it seems. But Mike will have it for winterjam.
I made a pair of mounting brackets out of square tubing. I drilled a 1/4" hole through each end.

I slide them onto the ends of the brushguard and clamped them. Once they where nice and straight I transfered the 1/4" holes through the guard.


Next I enlarged the hole with a holesaw. 7/8" I think. This allowed me to slide in small peices of 1/2" pipe. This will prevent the guard from crushing when the bolts are tightend.


Test fit.

Now I cut the bottoms off making them into channels. Those channles will get located to the chassis rails and welded in place.

I made a pair of mounting brackets out of square tubing. I drilled a 1/4" hole through each end.

I slide them onto the ends of the brushguard and clamped them. Once they where nice and straight I transfered the 1/4" holes through the guard.


Next I enlarged the hole with a holesaw. 7/8" I think. This allowed me to slide in small peices of 1/2" pipe. This will prevent the guard from crushing when the bolts are tightend.


Test fit.

Now I cut the bottoms off making them into channels. Those channles will get located to the chassis rails and welded in place.

- Brown
- Posts: 653
- Joined: Sun Sep 14, 2008 8:13 pm
- First Name: Ken
- Location: South Shore of Nassau County
Re: Home away from Home, on wheels.
Glenn A you are the master. I give you alot of credit for imagination and know how!!
"THE BLEEDER"
Re: Home away from Home, on wheels.
very sweet mock up......
great work as usual.
great work as usual.
Glenn wrote:I have to say, this "gruppe" is so much more than just a car club.
MrBreeze wrote: This is the DVG board. The threads flow as they flow.
Deal with it.
-
AoT
- Posts: 1029
- Joined: Fri Oct 17, 2008 8:09 pm
- First Name: Audrey
- Vehicle Year: 1974
- Model: Beetle
- Location: Ready for a road trip....
Re: Home away from Home, on wheels.
Creative juices are flowing, nice play by play on the bracket build!Glenn A wrote:
Keep working at it and it gets done!!
Re: Home away from Home, on wheels.
Thanks everyone.
I'm going to post a play by play on TS baywindow thread when this is done. So i'll probably go back to this thread and cut and paste. That is the reason for the play by play.
BTW my next garage will have radiant heat in the garage floor. The cold floor really zaps the life out of ya.
I'm going to post a play by play on TS baywindow thread when this is done. So i'll probably go back to this thread and cut and paste. That is the reason for the play by play.
BTW my next garage will have radiant heat in the garage floor. The cold floor really zaps the life out of ya.
- Glenn
- Posts: 3215
- Joined: Tue Sep 09, 2008 4:20 pm
- First Name: Glenn
- Vehicle Year: 1974
- Model: Beetle
- Location: Long Island, New York, USA
- Contact:
Re: Home away from Home, on wheels.
You better take a long hot shower afterward or else you'll never get the "stinkfoot" out.Glenn A wrote:I'm going to post a play by play on TS baywindow
Just ask Rob.
Glenn
74 Beetle Specs | 74 Beetle Restoration | 2180cc Engine
"You may not get what you pay for, but you always pay for what you get"
When you mess with the bull, you get the horns.
74 Beetle Specs | 74 Beetle Restoration | 2180cc Engine
"You may not get what you pay for, but you always pay for what you get"
When you mess with the bull, you get the horns.
- Brown
- Posts: 653
- Joined: Sun Sep 14, 2008 8:13 pm
- First Name: Ken
- Location: South Shore of Nassau County
Re: Home away from Home, on wheels.
I use a kerosine heater in my garage. I put it on about 30 min before i go out and it gets to the point where i can work in just a shirt. Good insulated workboots helps too. Of course my garage is not attached to my house either so i don't have to worry bout gasses the wife and kids!Glenn A wrote:Thanks everyone.
I'm going to post a play by play on TS baywindow thread when this is done. So i'll probably go back to this thread and cut and paste. That is the reason for the play by play.
BTW my next garage will have radiant heat in the garage floor. The cold floor really zaps the life out of ya.
"THE BLEEDER"
Re: Home away from Home, on wheels.
So I got the channels cleaned up. Then clamped/bolted them in place. located the pipe in the center and tacked it. Then unbolted the channel and welded the pipe all the way around.

Then I cut off the extra tube. In order to get it to pivot down I had to clearence the end of the tube. I sliced it with a sawzall bent the end flat then welded it. now it can allow the brushguard to swing down.




Done! Mike come and get it!





Then I cut off the extra tube. In order to get it to pivot down I had to clearence the end of the tube. I sliced it with a sawzall bent the end flat then welded it. now it can allow the brushguard to swing down.




Done! Mike come and get it!




- dubstar
- Posts: 162
- Joined: Fri Jun 05, 2009 9:44 am
- First Name: John
- Location: Long Beach, New York
- Contact:
Re: Home away from Home, on wheels.
nice...getting ready for bus bbq season!
john aka dubstar
1963 Type 2 Kombi
1977 Type 1 FI
wanted: any year / condition split window middle and rear seats for the '63
"oh ya! the bus has tires that hold air now and all drums are freeded"
1963 Type 2 Kombi
1977 Type 1 FI
wanted: any year / condition split window middle and rear seats for the '63
"oh ya! the bus has tires that hold air now and all drums are freeded"
Re: Home away from Home, on wheels.
great job as usual GA
Glenn wrote:I have to say, this "gruppe" is so much more than just a car club.
MrBreeze wrote: This is the DVG board. The threads flow as they flow.
Deal with it.
- Glenn
- Posts: 3215
- Joined: Tue Sep 09, 2008 4:20 pm
- First Name: Glenn
- Vehicle Year: 1974
- Model: Beetle
- Location: Long Island, New York, USA
- Contact:
Re: Home away from Home, on wheels.
You do nice work.
Glenn
74 Beetle Specs | 74 Beetle Restoration | 2180cc Engine
"You may not get what you pay for, but you always pay for what you get"
When you mess with the bull, you get the horns.
74 Beetle Specs | 74 Beetle Restoration | 2180cc Engine
"You may not get what you pay for, but you always pay for what you get"
When you mess with the bull, you get the horns.
- williamblanda
- Posts: 144
- Joined: Tue Jun 09, 2009 7:51 pm
- First Name: Will
- Location: The Back Roads of Upstate New York
Re: Home away from Home, on wheels.
Cool! That looks sweet, do want to do a roo bar style bumper for a spit window? 
You can call me Will
John Muir's Engine Sounds
Glenn wrote:you're a wise ass
Stop FrackingGlenn A wrote: Carpet goes on the bottom. Unless it's a van than it can go on the sides and ceiling too.
John Muir's Engine Sounds
- ObnoxiousBlue
- Site Admin
- Posts: 1424
- Joined: Tue Sep 09, 2008 5:23 pm
- First Name: Mike
- Vehicle Year: 1964
- Model: Beetle
- Location: Above ground...
- Contact:
Re: Home away from Home, on wheels.
Glenn, I couldnt answer your call I was at the funeral home. Im going to be at school tomorrow, can I stop by during the day to grab him?
Great work, it looks awesome. Ill spray it up in a nice shiny white this week and be on our way!
Ill be free around 1045/11 if thats not too late to call let me know, or feel free to call me then
Great work, it looks awesome. Ill spray it up in a nice shiny white this week and be on our way!
Ill be free around 1045/11 if thats not too late to call let me know, or feel free to call me then
Re: Home away from Home, on wheels.
Mike I left the key where you left it for me. Get it when you want. It is at the end of the driveway.
Thanks everyone. Enjoy Mike.
Thanks everyone. Enjoy Mike.
-
AoT
- Posts: 1029
- Joined: Fri Oct 17, 2008 8:09 pm
- First Name: Audrey
- Vehicle Year: 1974
- Model: Beetle
- Location: Ready for a road trip....
Re: Home away from Home, on wheels.
A picture worth a thousand words and ahead of schedule!Glenn A wrote:
Kudos
Keep working at it and it gets done!!
-
Big_kid
Re: Home away from Home, on wheels.
Looks great! You should consider selling knockdown kits!
- Glenn
- Posts: 3215
- Joined: Tue Sep 09, 2008 4:20 pm
- First Name: Glenn
- Vehicle Year: 1974
- Model: Beetle
- Location: Long Island, New York, USA
- Contact:
Re: Home away from Home, on wheels.
POWDER PAINT... it will look better and hold up better.ObnoxiousBlue wrote: Ill spray it up in a nice shiny white this week and be on our way!
Glenn
74 Beetle Specs | 74 Beetle Restoration | 2180cc Engine
"You may not get what you pay for, but you always pay for what you get"
When you mess with the bull, you get the horns.
74 Beetle Specs | 74 Beetle Restoration | 2180cc Engine
"You may not get what you pay for, but you always pay for what you get"
When you mess with the bull, you get the horns.
-
mannys66
Re: Home away from Home, on wheels.
I dont think he made the bar itself, he only made the brackets and installed it.Big_kid wrote:Looks great! You should consider selling knockdown kits!
Re: Home away from Home, on wheels.
Mike bought the brushguard from Flanders NJ last season. He asked me at the show if I could install it for him. Of course I waited till the last minute.Big_kid wrote:Looks great! You should consider selling knockdown kits!
Mike I was thinkin it might look cool semi gloss black. It would match the strip on the bumper the wiper arms. Maybe you could prime it black and toss it on to see how it looks before you spray it the final color.
The powder coater will have to sand blast it to coat it anyway. So just rattle can it for winterjam.
Don't forget to paint the brackets black under the bus.
Re: Home away from Home, on wheels.
Mike,
Def have it powdered. Paint will wear off that thing from driving it so soon. And it'll look like shit with the rust drip marks on the white left over paint. Its gonna be a few bucks to have it coated tho.
Before you have it done, think about adding some tabs for fog lights.
BTW... looks real nice on there
Def have it powdered. Paint will wear off that thing from driving it so soon. And it'll look like shit with the rust drip marks on the white left over paint. Its gonna be a few bucks to have it coated tho.
Before you have it done, think about adding some tabs for fog lights.
BTW... looks real nice on there
Glenn wrote:I have to say, this "gruppe" is so much more than just a car club.
MrBreeze wrote: This is the DVG board. The threads flow as they flow.
Deal with it.
-
Big_kid
Re: Home away from Home, on wheels.
Ahh... Something tells me I missed that somewhere. Nice work on the install though.Glenn A and Manny both basically wrote: Mike bought the brushguard from Flanders NJ last season. He asked me at the show if I could install it for him.
Good idea on the tabsRaj wrote: Def have it powdered. Paint will wear off that thing from driving it so soon. And it'll look like shit with the rust drip marks on the white left over paint... Before you have it done, think about adding some tabs for fog lights...


