When
daughter Liz married Andy, it soon became clear that they were desperate
to own a campervan, both being fans of the outdoor life, & watersports
in particular. Being keen motorhomers ourselves, we were delighted
to help by making the conversion a belated wedding present. Andy had
visions of surfing cool VW campervans, & as I was retired with
allegedly nothing better to do, I gladly volunteered to help find
a suitable vehicle. My internet searching soon had me convinced that
a Bongo based van represented far better value than a VW. Mind you,
Andy took some convincing accepting a vehicle called a Bongo, or worse,
a Freda!
After
a couple of visits to A1 Auctions at Southampton docks, we came away
with a very smart '97 4WD, 52,000 miler, with twin electronic A/C
& twin batteries, for £4100. A further £125 indemnity,
& £125 transport, saw the Bongo sat on my drive in the Midlands
a few days later. A new mph speedo face off ebay was soon fitted,
along with rewiring the offside reversing lamp with a high output
LED bulb provided the rear fog lamp, & we sailed through the MOT
with no problems.

Next
job was to build a simple unit across the rear in mdf painted grey,
& fitted with sink/hob combo, fridge & storage. This was sufficient
for the DVLA inspector to register the vehicle as a motorhome, thus
avoiding the expense & time for SVA approval (motorhomes are exempt,
although the rules have been tightened since I undertook this project).
Next, I fitted 3M Thinsulate insulation behind side & door trims,
& on the floor. The carpet & rear seats were discarded, &
a 12mm ply floor mounted on 15mm spacer blocks, all glued with PU
adhesive. B&Q silver grey checker plate vinyl finished the floor
off a treat.

My plan
for the furniture was to use grey lightweight board from DecorLam,
in conjunction with Reimo medium grey plastic profiles & edging.
As the board is pretty expensive, a packaging mock-up was constructed
first using cheap 15mm mdf. The mdf parts then formed the patterns
for cutting the DecorLam.


I was
lucky to purchase a 40ltr Waeco fridge with separate compressor, £200
off at the Feb. NEC show. This allowed me to package the fridge with
minimum intrusion, into the unit shown left above. Temporary mdf slaves
were removed after sliding the whole unit into place, which was then
bolted to the seat mounting studs atop the wheelarch. Note that plenty
of ventilation holes provide air movement for the fridge compressor
& microwave.

Fuses,
MCB/ELCB & mains/inverter selector switch were mounted on the
back of this unit.

A 1kw
(2kw peak) inverter was mounted as shown by reversing the foot rest
to give clearance. A battery master switch hidden under the trim panel
requires the ignition key to be removed to operate the inverter. The
Eberspacher blown air heater was mounted in the engine bay, whilst
it's control unit looked made to measure to fit the dash! Small LED
rocker switches control house electrics via a 30A relay, & rear
fog lamp.

Storage
features 2x10ltr water canisters, portapotti, large cutlery drawer,
side & seat cupboards, microwave, & fridge, & the top
locker houses a full set of dinnerware for 4.

And via
the tailgate, folding table, 904 gas cylinder, hook-up lead, pitch
marker, bbq set, 2x folding chairs, stools, & levelling ramps,
boot space under m/wave, & emergency kit.
Liz &
Andy are thrilled with their Bongo, & use it a lot. I really enjoyed
the experience to the extent that, much to wife Mary's consternation,
I sold our luxurious Hymer, & have built a Renault based motorhome
for ourselves. Now that is another story! If you are thinking of building
your own, & have reasonable diy skills,
have a go! It is great fun, & deeply satisfying enjoying a campervan
that you have built yourself.