The Journal of the Wandering Engineer

Build Report: The Camper Shell Part 1

In the Fall of 2020 I found myself in Michigan with a truck, a motorcycle, access to a wood shop, and a meandering journey back west ahead of me. I wanted to be able to sleep in my truck without fuss, keep my motorcycle and gear dry and safe, and not spend a lot of money doing it. Commercial camper shells are quite expensive. “Adventure” camper shells cost more than my truck is worth.

Obviously, I needed to build my own camper shell.

I’d been noodling over various DIY camper shell designs for years, and already had a sketchup file full of WIP models.

My hard drives are full of this stuff

My hard drives are full of this stuff

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The trick with this build is that the bed of my truck isn’t square - it’s literally twisted. If I built the topper square on the ground, it might not fit my not-square truck bed. So I had to build it on the bed, to ensure it was properly crooked.

The framing is 1x3 pine, bolted to the bed. Siding is shiplap pine. Roof is corrugated metal siding.

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This was my first “shou sugi ban” project, which is just a fancy way of saying “I blowtorched the boards, then slathered them in Boiled Linseed Oil”. Burning the boards closes up the wood grain, makes them unfriendly to insects, and makes them look cool (which is the whole point, really). The oil keeps them weather proof and from dry rotting.

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I almost didn’t build the front wind scoop because I was under time pressure. One test trip down the road without it revealed a high-pitched whining noise - the gap between the cab and the camper shell essentially functioned as a fipple. NFG. I built the front air scoop between 8pm and midnight the night before I packed all my stuff in the truck and drove across the country.

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Adventure #1, above 10,000’ near Telluride CO.

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The one thing I didn’t get to during phase 1 was a door. I got this cotton tarp and rigged it up with bungee cords on my way out of town instead.

It works okay, but you have to remember to bungee it otherwise it’s going to be flapping around on the highway, and obviously it’s less secure. It also has a sort of “this truck is probably full of garbage on its way to the dump” vibe, which come to think of it is it’s own form of security.

Addressing the tarp issue is the subject of phase 2 of the build report…

Build Report: Camper Shell Part 2

Chasing Stoke