VW Transporter Day Van Conversion

VW Transporter Day Van Conversion

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Discussion

ChocolateFrog

Original Poster:

25,149 posts

173 months

Saturday 18th February 2017
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I'd been hankering for another car for months. I've got a V70 D5 that I've owned for 4 years, I usually get itchy feet to try something else after 6 months.

I looked all sorts from Nissan Silvia S15 and TVR Chimaera's to, well, a van with Audi A8's and Allroad's in between.

In the end I settled on a 2011 T5.1 T30 LWB Transporter with FSH and a not inconsiderable 232 thousand miles. It's got the 2.0 CR diesel in 140 bhp tune. Not the best engine VW has ever made but it came with the 6 speed box which I wanted.

I've covered 400 miles in it since purchase and there's no nasty surprises still feels tight and everything works as it should, mostly.

I intent to turn it into a day van, insulate and carpet the interior and tidy up the outside colour coding the bumpers and sticking some decent wheels on it.

This is how it looks at the moment.





Very builders van, not sure what it was used for but the passenger seats look unused and the rear bumper barely has a mark on it.

First job was a full service I always service new to me cars to get a baseline and know it's got the right fluids in. Oil is an extra £30 just to keep the DPF happy. I'll get round to the gearbox oil too soon.



I also picked up a set of disco 4 alloys with the same PCD and offset as the T5 has. Just waiting for the correct wheel bolts and spigot rings to arrive before bolting them on. They're load rated to 950kg per corner with 111V tyres so more than sufficient for the van.



This is what the rear looked like before I started.



Generally in good nick. The wheel wells have a few dints, it looks like they've been uncovered it's whole life. I'll tidy those up before carpeting them. Under the watchful eye of this one I set about stripping the interior.



2 hours later and the pile of nuts, bolts and trim clips was getting bigger.



Quite impressed with the quality of every thing that's coming off so far and no nasty surprises. The floor was next and was a pain to get up. It had been riveted through the floor with around 20 rivets which needed drilling out and was sealed round the edge with silicone, but after an hour I had it looking like this.



Filthy but nothing more. After a hoover out I ground down all the rivets and sanded back a couple a minor surface rust spots, where the floor had been fitted and water had got in past the rivets. I then painted the bare metal with POR chassis paint, this stuff is brilliant and I can highly recommend it, pricy but worth it.



Much better.

The bumpers and mirrors are off to the bodyshop on monday so I'll get them off tomorrow and hopefully have time to tidy up the wheel wells too. Now the van is stripped I need a dent guy to come round to tidy up a few blemishes so if anyone can recommend a good one in South Yorkshire let me know.

Edited by ChocolateFrog on Saturday 18th February 21:26

RumbleOfThunder

3,552 posts

203 months

Saturday 18th February 2017
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Nice. I'm a van casual so what's meant by "day van"?

Bdevo3

478 posts

89 months

Saturday 18th February 2017
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have the same year and colour as my work horse. great going van. economical enough. front wishbone bushes and rear springs seem to be a serviceable item on mine although mine has full shelving in the back. very interested to see what you do with yours

eltax91

9,866 posts

206 months

Saturday 18th February 2017
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RumbleOfThunder said:
Nice. I'm a van casual so what's meant by "day van"?
A sort of campervan with the ability to cook/ sleep but not full on motorhome sleep innot for weeks. At least I believe so

ChocolateFrog

Original Poster:

25,149 posts

173 months

Saturday 18th February 2017
quotequote all
RumbleOfThunder said:
Nice. I'm a van casual so what's meant by "day van"?
My understand is rather than a full on camper it's everything involved in making a camper without actually fitting it out with units and beds etc so it will have windows, electrics, lighting, insulation, carpeting and so on.

If I want to camp I'll through a stove, coolbox and airbed in and be good to go.

ChocolateFrog

Original Poster:

25,149 posts

173 months

Saturday 18th February 2017
quotequote all
Bdevo3 said:
have the same year and colour as my work horse. great going van. economical enough. front wishbone bushes and rear springs seem to be a serviceable item on mine although mine has full shelving in the back. very interested to see what you do with yours
Got some HR lowering springs to go on, I'm assuming the originals are pretty tired. I'll check the bushes when I swap the wheels over.

Bdevo3

478 posts

89 months

Saturday 18th February 2017
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h and r are a great choice. have had them in most of my daily drivers they give a nice drop and still maintain a good level of comfort without scrubbing or bottoming out. the only thing I'd change is the drivers seat typical vw van seat, I find it hard to get comfortable in and very poor support certainly on long journeys or maybe I'm just getting old before my time

ChocolateFrog

Original Poster:

25,149 posts

173 months

Saturday 18th February 2017
quotequote all
Bdevo3 said:
h and r are a great choice. have had them in most of my daily drivers they give a nice drop and still maintain a good level of comfort without scrubbing or bottoming out. the only thing I'd change is the drivers seat typical vw van seat, I find it hard to get comfortable in and very poor support certainly on long journeys or maybe I'm just getting old before my time
Coming from the Volvo which has possibly the most comfortable seats of any car highlights how uncomfortable they are.

Wonder if the volvo seats will go in scratchchin

Escort3500

11,881 posts

145 months

Saturday 18th February 2017
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232k miles - wow. Looks good on it though.

Just a thought, but I think you'll have to register it on the V5 as a dayvan; you have to when converting to a campervan.

ChocolateFrog

Original Poster:

25,149 posts

173 months

Sunday 19th February 2017
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Yes I may do. No major drama though, at least I wouldn't be limited to 50/60 mph on single and dual carriageways.

robwilk

818 posts

180 months

Sunday 19th February 2017
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ChocolateFrog said:
Coming from the Volvo which has possibly the most comfortable seats of any car highlights how uncomfortable they are.

Wonder if the volvo seats will go in scratchchin
Yes Ive fitted volvo seats in my T5 just fitted them as a stop gap but they are still there years later.
I converted my shuttle to a caravelle spec made a multi board and use it as a day / work / camper. love it.
Rob

robwilk

818 posts

180 months

Sunday 19th February 2017
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ChocolateFrog said:
Yes I may do. No major drama though, at least I wouldn't be limited to 50/60 mph on single and dual carriageways.
To be classed as a motor caravan you have to fit in with a few rules, sink cooker are a few would have to look up the rest so its not possible to reclassify a van without a full conversion, one of the reasons I started with a shuttle.

MDMA .

8,884 posts

101 months

Sunday 19th February 2017
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I might have a floor for one of those.

ChocolateFrog

Original Poster:

25,149 posts

173 months

Sunday 19th February 2017
quotequote all
Bit more progress today, the sun even came out, briefly.

First job was to get the bumpers off ready for the bodyshop tomorrow. Started with the rear and apart from a bolt hidden behind the wheel arch at each side it was pretty straight forward.



Next up was the front bumper, a little tricker. Couple of hidden 10 mm nuts under each headlight, once I'd peeled the wheel arch back there was just enough room to get a ratchet in. There's a couple of bit of the loom that are rooted through the bumper for the external temp sensor that needed fishing out but after 45 mins or so it was free.





The mirror covers were next and it's safe to say they're not designed to be removed. I think the glass needs to come out to do it properly but many people have cracked them getting them back in. Added to that the plastic lugs are incredibly thin and brittle, a few were sacrificed so they'll need a bit of sealant when they go back in.



Also needed to remove the passenger seats to get to the b pillar trim, eventually the carpet will be trimmed behind it. Nice surprise to see a usualable storage space under the seat.



It was at this point I came across spline drive bolts and not needing an excuse to buy more tools popped off to Halfords for these



I also removed the sliding door step, a taller one from a caravelle is required with the deeper floor. This revealed a bit more of the red stuff. Luckily not too serious. These are the worst bits





Didn't have time to sort it but will get round to it. Part of the cause is where the bulkhead was brazed to the flor, it looks like it was ground back to bare metal but no protect added after it was installed.

Just had time to stick a layer of filler on the wheel arches. They'll need sanded and touching up again but it doesn't need to be perfect as it will be under the carpet.





That's up to date. Need to get the carpet ordered tomorrow and pluck up the courage to fit the windows.

A3gaz

770 posts

182 months

Sunday 19th February 2017
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Serious question as I really have no idea, but is this the most cost effective way of acquiring a day van??

neilbauer

2,467 posts

183 months

Sunday 19th February 2017
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Will follow this interest, nice work so far smile

Escort3500

11,881 posts

145 months

Sunday 19th February 2017
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robwilk said:
ChocolateFrog said:
Yes I may do. No major drama though, at least I wouldn't be limited to 50/60 mph on single and dual carriageways.
To be classed as a motor caravan you have to fit in with a few rules, sink cooker are a few would have to look up the rest so its not possible to reclassify a van without a full conversion, one of the reasons I started with a shuttle.
Just checked and you're right. The mods the OP is doing don't require it to be re-registered (no fixed bed, sink etc).

ChocolateFrog

Original Poster:

25,149 posts

173 months

Sunday 19th February 2017
quotequote all
A3gaz said:
Serious question as I really have no idea, but is this the most cost effective way of acquiring a day van??
Depends. Definitely not the cheapest. Vito's, transits etc can be had for half the price, however they also sell for half the price.

I could have bought one ready made and possible saved a bit but wanted to do the work myself and this way I can have it exactly to my spec.

As far as Transporters go this was the cheapest facelift model (2010 onwards) I've seen so assuming it doesn't blow up on me it should prove pretty cost effective.

neilbauer

2,467 posts

183 months

Sunday 19th February 2017
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How well can you get the bumpers colour coded? Seen a few nightmares where tha plaint flakes off!

economicpygmy

387 posts

123 months

Sunday 19th February 2017
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Bookmarked as Im thinking of doing something similar. Whats involved in getting it classifed as a camper for the higher speed limits? I thought the most cost effective way would be buy a van given I dont want everything and the kitchen sink ( tongue out ). Dare I ask how much it was?