How to glue aluminum sheets on the camper truck habitat wall and lots of diy tips about the process

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  • Опубликовано: 5 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 34

  • @klauzada1
    @klauzada1 Год назад +2

    Thank you for sharing, Oskar! Really good tips! Love your channel!🫶

  • @backbeatpat
    @backbeatpat Год назад +4

    Good to see an alternative type habitate build taking place. Good work man and very informative.

  • @fergusmoloney
    @fergusmoloney Год назад +2

    Huge milestone reached. Congratulations. This will be a superb overlander when you finish. Love the content.

  • @MrRichardrobbins
    @MrRichardrobbins Год назад +1

    Another weeks great progress < good job Mario. I see 404 has been moved!

  • @codyj1162
    @codyj1162 Месяц назад +1

    Super awesome info!❤

  • @overlandingomar
    @overlandingomar Год назад +2

    Getting there. Great tips

  • @richardmadrilin1505
    @richardmadrilin1505 Год назад +1

    I watched most of your videos and was very impressed with your determination for all this amazing work, and wondered why you didn't use gelcoat polyester panels instead of aluminum sheets, the polyester panels are 5mm thick, have the advantage of measuring up to 12m long by 2.5m, so there is no need to make joints, but the difficulty is that it is impossible to handle alone.

    • @oscaroverlander_MB1222AF
      @oscaroverlander_MB1222AF  Год назад

      Thank you for your question. Honestly I looked in to that at the beginning of my research but found out pretty quick that this is something I can't by domestically, needed to import it which creates higher cost. Also I can not do it without help and well sized work shop. I was afraid of having warped walls, steel and aluminum represent materials I feel comfortable to work with experience wise. But it is definitely a possibility to do it that way !

  • @karikultalahti4102
    @karikultalahti4102 Год назад +1

    To clerify, you need to consider the mounting temperature in tip number 5

    • @oscaroverlander_MB1222AF
      @oscaroverlander_MB1222AF  Год назад

      Thank you for your comment, the mounting temperature is not so important as long you are within the specified temperature for the glue process. But what I explained in tip number 5 was the constantly changing surrounding temperature through weather, elevations and season. That will have a thermal expansion impact on the sheets.

  • @livingworkingoutsidebox
    @livingworkingoutsidebox Год назад +1

    Congratulations 🌟 👍 looks good.
    Globe Trekker uses a power caulker with sikaflex not sure if 252. They make these Expedition panels. They have a build series that talks about using it and shows it in use often.
    Thanks for the tips at the end. Very good breakdown about the expansion gaps.

  • @OKFrax-ys2op
    @OKFrax-ys2op 7 месяцев назад +1

    So much better than 2x4’s and plywood

  • @TheSnapper80
    @TheSnapper80 Год назад +1

    Hello Oscar. Great video. I wonder, could a full size FRP sheet (4mm) to cover the sides done the job as well? What do you think?

    • @oscaroverlander_MB1222AF
      @oscaroverlander_MB1222AF  Год назад

      If you can get it in that size it would be a possibility. But not for me because I used FRP sheets in my trailer and the handle bar from my bike smashed a hole in to it very easy, so I like to have something stronger.

  • @guyhodgson5401
    @guyhodgson5401 Год назад +1

    Hi Oscar, very informative - Quick question: If you have an expansion of 2,56 mm in the panel; and another panel next to it also expanding 2.56 mm, why did you only allow 3 mm gaps between the sheets? Using your numbers I would assume that the expansion allowance would not be enough?? Would be very interested in your clarification?
    I am building a "Habitat" on to a 1995 Isuzu FTS 700 Australian Firetruck - low kilometers (35,000 kms in 38 years)
    Really interesting video's - Cheers - Guy

    • @oscaroverlander_MB1222AF
      @oscaroverlander_MB1222AF  Год назад

      Hi Guy thank you for commenting and I wish you all best with your project. In case of the expansion gab a aluminum sheet expands always to both sides, means roughly 1.3 mm to each side, if the adjacent sheet does the same there is still plenty of space for them to move back and forth.

  • @jdcoverland365
    @jdcoverland365 Год назад +1

    OSCAR; Ambition Strikes is the model for my build. They say use a pneumatic caulking gun to get the 252 out of the tubes. Please link your calculators so I can have this for my records. Thank you.

  • @EnriqueMagaña-b3r
    @EnriqueMagaña-b3r 7 месяцев назад +1

    Oscar, what did you apply to the metal before the 252 Sika? thanks

    • @oscaroverlander_MB1222AF
      @oscaroverlander_MB1222AF  7 месяцев назад

      To the metal rust preventive primer , after that the usual activator/primer/sika 😉

  • @chesterburns3539
    @chesterburns3539 Год назад +1

    Do you have to hold the vertical panels against the frame while the 252 sets?

    • @oscaroverlander_MB1222AF
      @oscaroverlander_MB1222AF  Год назад

      You don't have to hold them, if you have squeezed them in the sika bead they hold in position.

  • @Equine_moon
    @Equine_moon Год назад +1

    Looks great! Did you consider using 3M VHB tape?

    • @oscaroverlander_MB1222AF
      @oscaroverlander_MB1222AF  Год назад +1

      Yes I do but only at the roof. First I have to see how well the silicone beads look like and will I trust them, if not I apply the tape over the whole seam cover strip.

    • @Equine_moon
      @Equine_moon Год назад

      @@oscaroverlander_MB1222AF I meant instead of the Sika glue, for the panels? It is made for that. I am sure your work will never fall apart, your prepwork etc.
      And I don’t think you’ll need extra strips at all.