[AT] Gypsy Wagon project pictures
Alan Riley
arr44 at suddenlink.net
Thu Sep 6 10:36:34 PDT 2007
Looks great, farmer. I love to see pictures of projects like that. At least
you won't have to worry about the grandkids wanting to borrow it! :>)
Alan
----- Original Message -----
From: "Francis Robinson" <robinson at svs.net>
To: "Antique tractor email discussion group" <at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
Sent: Thursday, September 06, 2007 12:16 AM
Subject: [AT] Gypsy Wagon project pictures
>I have not used this photo site for a long time so I hope I got the link
> right. We whipped this out in about 3 hot days mostly under a soft 2 car
> carport outside of the wood-shop door.
> Some of you saw this rig at Portland.
> I came up with this notion so that we can haul my little Farmall CUB
> farm tractor or other small tractors to a few tractor shows and also use it
> for camping in after we get there. In these first 3 pictures it is sitting
> chained down inside of the trailer. The trailer under the gypsy wagon is one
> that I have used for several years to haul the CUB to shows. The "box" is
> 59" wide at the floor and 10' long. At the offset it goes to about 7' 8"
> wide. It is a long ways from fully complete but we did use it to haul to the
> Portland IN tractor show and did sleep in it for 3 nights. The 4th picture
> will give you an idea of the amount of interior space. I am claustrophobic
> but it does not make me uncomfortable at all sleeping or sitting in it.
> It still needs a 24"x24" window with screen installed in each side and a
> large window in the front that will have a solid cover that will open up
> like a concession stand to reveal a sizable screened opening. That opening
> will have a screen that opens so I can reach in from the front to chain that
> end of the tractor down. The door for it will be much larger than the
> opening to keep blowing rain out while allowing good ventilation. The two
> top panels in the rear doors lift out to provide screened openings there
> which can be open in even a fairly driving rain sheltered by the roof
> overhang. On this trip I used a set of steel loading ramps I have but it
> will later get a 60" x 6' full ramp that will hinge under the doors and
> after the tractor is unloaded it will raise up and become a small porch
> where two lawn chairs can sit up out of the mud we sometimes encounter at
> show grounds. When not in use it will fold up against the rear of the
> trailer much like
> a large pickup tailgate. AT this time it is not finished out inside but will
> be. For this trip we borrowed the bed sections from our old 24' travel
> trailer and the concept worked well. We finally found a pair of small K-1
> lanterns we knew we had "someplace" which will hang on the roof support
> brackets at the rear. Everybody has their own notion at how it should be
> "decorated"... ;-) Diana mentioned hanging pots and pans all over it.
> :-) I believe the words "snake oil" came up at one time.
> The thing I love about a project like this is how it fires the
> imagination thinking about the possibilities... We have a full stable of
> camping equipment so we can be pretty comfortable in such a rig. Of course
> we can camp in it without hauling the tractor.
> I may go a little farther with this one then sell it and build another
> being a little more fussy about keeping weight down. I was really surprised
> at how many compliments we got on it at the show. Of course a couple of my
> teen grandchildren think it is really ugly and embarrassing... It was worth
> it just for that... ;-)
>
> http://albums.photo.epson.com/j/AlbumIndex?u=3009440&a=32581728&f=
>
>
>
>
> --
> "farmer"
>
> Francis Robinson
> Central Indiana, USA
> robinson at svs.net
>
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