EastCoastCB
Senior Member
I like those 6.0's. Nice shorty!
Sometimes I wish I could start over with a 40 footer, an 8.3L Cummins, and a top-grade transmission.
Worry not my brother, I will not bring shame to the way of the skoolie.It's the worst thing I've ever seen on a skoolie. This is why they don't let us into RV parks!!!
Worry not my brother, I will not bring shame to the way of the skoolie.
It would be fairly hilarious to tow around some jalopy trailer behind that gorgeous bus though. Pretend it's a mother in law suite.Dude, the quality of your main bus gives you more than enough skoolie karma for you to proudly drive whatever other POS bus you want.
My SO told me she thinks its hilarious that we're thinking of towing the van behind the shortie on a dolly. Big bus with a boatload of solar on it followed by small bus with a little less solar pulling a van with even less solar on it. What a circus.It would be fairly hilarious to tow around some jalopy trailer behind that gorgeous bus though. Pretend it's a mother in law suite.





Great build KZ. Congrats on the move in !!So I'm still parked in the driveway, but I think I can safely call this one our "first day of bus life". Yesterday we brought our pair of 50" 4k TVs out to the bus to install on the rail. The rail runs the length of the passenger side wall between the wood stove so that the displays can be positioned anywhere on the wall.
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This is so we can move them near the stove for relaxation/movie night and over in front of the windows for use as a monitors in our "office". A 4K TV without overscaling is the equivalent of four 1080p monitors.
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This lead to us working our jobs out in the bus yesterday, and later, moving the beds in...
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And the kitchen necessities for this morning.
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As eager as I am to get into this, I didn't feel ready. In reverse of current trends, my SO was the driving force behind yesterday's move. There's a few problems we've identified:
Overall, it was very cozy. I am amazed sometimes at how little the interior feels like I'm in a bus, or vehicle at all. The wood look was the right choice, its very homey.
- Light control in the morning
- Beds are low enough that temp drops significantly
- No bathroom door yet!
- Probably good idea to add vents in the bathroom, too.
- Cable management will be a challenge.
- The Nature's head will take some getting used to. Will probably also implement the liquids mod most other folks I've seen have.
Hope your coffee tastes as good as mine this morning.
I like that adviceHere is one for the for what it is worth category ....
We have made four trips between Fort Worth, TX to Cocoa, FL with our bus as a moving van. Granted, we did only the minimum to make the trips livable but on every trip we find so many new things that need to be addressed, some big some small.
My conclusion is ... take a notebook and pen along on each and every trip to keep track of all the things that need to get done.





My family is likely to think I'm nuts and stage some kind of intervention. No matter the rationale. Ugh!
You know, having a vehicle you can stand inside of at the grocery store or Home Depot opens up some interesting possibilities I bet.

Anyone replace floor joists under the cab? For the most part the shortie is doing pretty well in terms of rust. For a CT bus, anyway. Certainly not as pristine as my International. But there is one joist that looks like its starting to fade. Can I use square tube of the same width?

Just curious, are you planning to drive 2 busses everywhere, or are you going to tow the shorty with the big bus? That would certainly be interesting.....