- AATREC Construction (25)
- Alaska 2009 (15)
- Alaska 2009 preTrip (6)
- Astronomy (1)
- Hawaii, 2009 (6)
- HJ-75 Restoration (6)
- Local Trips (1)
- Scenery (2)
- Uncategorized (1)
- Weather (3)
- July 28 2010: The Bush Tax Cuts
- June 18 2010: Cripple Creek & Victor Gold Mine
- June 15 2010: Old Troopy Photo
- June 2 2010: Spring Video News
- May 29 2010: Memorial Day Weekend
- April 3 2010: Chassis Sheds Her Body
- March 30 2010: Hawaii Vacation Rental
- January 4 2010: HJ-75 Frame Length
- December 21 2009: Alaska (Canada) Video Under Way
- December 15 2009: Troopy makes it inside!
Troopy makes it inside!
After sitting in the front of the shop while we were in Hawaii and Baltimore, the old Cruiser finally rolled off the trailer and into the shop on Saturday…
Now the whole room smells like rats! They’ve sure enjoyed themselves for the decade+ the HJ was in storage…
Time to tear it apart and start stocking up on rebuild parts. Since selling the big AATREC-FM204, I want to build a mini-AATREC. This vehicle will likely become an “AATREC-HJ” camper, with the troop compartment converted into a camper. It’ll mostly be a bed, fridge and small counter with diesel stove and sink, all over an elevated floor. Under the floor, I suspect you’ll find 25 gallons of water, a small water heater, two AGM betteries, and rear pull-out drawers for storage of food and cooking supplies. Just dreaming at this point, but it’ll eventually come to fruition. Right now, it looks like this…
One nice thing about the old HJ is the straight and rust-free body. It was shipped to Wyoming from Port Hedland, Western Australia in 1987, and it’s been in this 17% no-salt climate ever since. At least there won’t be too much body work!
I still have a number of projects to get to here before going hog-wild with the Cruiser project. Our Fiat tractor decided to start leaking fuel from three different places at once. (???) I’ve got a fuel suction leak on our firetruck (Unimog U1300L) that’s keeping her from running. The stuff never ends. Fix one thing, something else breaks. Oh well… That’s the fun of it, right?
Recently, I fought a situation with our 1970 Unimog fouling spark plugs in just a few minutes running. I rebuilt the carb multiple times, completely rebuilt the ignition system, and then (and only then) did I figure out that it was old gasoline. It was so dark, it looked like dyed diesel fuel. Now she’s ready for winter with a rebuilt carb, new ignition, and decent fuel…
This is really good news, because the old Swiss 404 is our go-to winter machine. Her skinny tires and tremendous ground clearance get us through the biggest snow drifts at the worst times, and we were really worrying about blizzards without the Unimog in our vehicular arsenal.
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