Freightliner Bus Alternative - Page 3
 

Freightliner Bus Alternative

Started by Scott & Heather, May 27, 2013, 07:35:58 AM

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luvrbus

I see Waste Management has refueling stations open to the public at their landfills now I saw the price on their billboard  in Conroe Tx $2.16 per gal cheap fuel but a expensive up front cost for a vehicle fwiw 165,000 for a truck is a little on the pricey side
Life is short drink the good wine first

Ednj

Quote from: Ed Hackenbruch on May 28, 2013, 12:54:57 PM
Wally and Darcy know a guy from their area,(Maine) that does/has done truck conversions. He has been in Yuma the last few years with his, i met him this winter, i think it is a Peterbilt and the back looks like a Prevost. Can't remember his name.

His name is Dick Lamb.
He truly built it himself.
His business is custom land yachts in Windom Maine & yuma.
Here a small picture.
MCI-9
Sussex county, Delaware.
See my picture's at= http://groups.yahoo.com/group/busshellconverters/
That's Not Oil Dripping under my Bus, It's Sweat from all that Horsepower.
----- This space for rent. -----

luvrbus

That's a Prevost XL mounted on the Pete you can tell by looking at the baggage doors and curve on the roof I don't think he built the shell part to much signature Prevost on it nice truck RV anyway
Life is short drink the good wine first

Ednj

Listen to what I'm saying. ;)
He built it himself.
He lengthened the pete frame and stick framed the back (metal) much like Tom did Only he made it to accept Prevost body panels.
He ordered the panels from Prevo.
Although it was never a Bus the panels are from Prevost. 8) :o ;D
MCI-9
Sussex county, Delaware.
See my picture's at= http://groups.yahoo.com/group/busshellconverters/
That's Not Oil Dripping under my Bus, It's Sweat from all that Horsepower.
----- This space for rent. -----

luvrbus

Since you are so sure about it I knew I read or saw and article on that unit go to the Bangor paper archives read B-2 edition 1 dated July 09 2001 about and odd marriage he did with a Pete and the bus it was on the AP also no mention of panels I think you guys are trying to pull my leg that has Prevost written all over it
Life is short drink the good wine first

Ednj

Clifford, not to argue with you but I do know first hand. I was at his shop when he and his dad built it.
MCI-9
Sussex county, Delaware.
See my picture's at= http://groups.yahoo.com/group/busshellconverters/
That's Not Oil Dripping under my Bus, It's Sweat from all that Horsepower.
----- This space for rent. -----

luvrbus

Life is short drink the good wine first

John316

Sold - MCI 1995 DL3. DD S60 with a Allison B500.

Ed Hackenbruch

 When i talked to him he told me the same thing that he told Ednj.  When you see it your first thought is that a Prevost rear ended a truck. ;D
Used to own a 1968 MCI 5A and a 1977 5C.

Iceni John

How about a bookmobile instead?   Here's one that's also on the Skoolie forum:  Camel RV conversion tour, Part 1   It will have a garage inside for a Jeep SUV, it has 7'6" ceilings and straight walls, and it's built on an International 3800 so parts are available everywhere.   For a truck-based conversion this approach may be worth considering.

John
1990 Crown 2R-40N-552 (the Super II):  6V92TAC / DDEC II / Jake,  HT740.     Hecho en Chino.
2kW of tiltable solar.
Behind the Orange Curtain, SoCal.

Iceni John

And here's a bookmobile for sale in Irving TX:  http://www.lonestaronline.com/listings/details/index.cfm?itemnum=1053886697#TOP
That one's more like a FE skoolie than truck-based.

John
1990 Crown 2R-40N-552 (the Super II):  6V92TAC / DDEC II / Jake,  HT740.     Hecho en Chino.
2kW of tiltable solar.
Behind the Orange Curtain, SoCal.

Seangie

Curious if that single rear axle on that bus will support the 4000 extra pounds of the Jeep.

-Sean


www.herdofturtles.org
1984 Eagle Model 10S
'Cause you know we,
we live in a van (Eagle 10 Suburban)
Driving through the night
To that old promised land'

longjohn

Wow ,
Now that is an old truckers dream motor home what ever color, green yellow (now red) white i forget what the old 903's that Holly Farms used to run were .   I say   a mechanical 3406 b model  with at least a 13 sp ( not going off road or pulling anything heavy enough to have to split shift the lower five for an 18 sp.  ( Now before the emissions and weight and fuel consumption police  all jump in) ( this is  my fantasy)   Really  no matter what engine dd 2 stroke or cat or Cummins lift the hood it's all right there to work on and no worry's about  rear radiators  no cooling issues  if the clutch fan don't keep up just flip the switch  drop a gear  and still  stay out in the hammer lane  just strolling!!!! ;D ;D ;D    ok now back to reality 8)
Would love to see more pics of this unit. i think my nephew found some on Large Car .Com forum
You older guys  know the feelin!
Sorry for getting off topic of OP thread.
John O
Eastern Shore of Maryland.

harleyman_1000

 Nobody said anything about the Cummins engines? Good or bad?
Scott 
St.Louis Missouri

1958 GM 4104 Extended 2 feet, with a 6v92 and 5 speed automatic

http://s783.photobucket.com/user/harleyman_1000/library/Gm4104%20bus?sort=3&page=1

Uglydog56

I like the cummins, but I'm locked into it pretty much.  Most buses have a detroit. It would be difficult to beat a 3406b though if that option were made available.

Sent from my SCH-I535 using Tapatalk 2
Rick A. Cone
Silverdale, WA
66 Crowny Crown "The Ark"