The sort of current final step of my build (for right now anyway) was adding items that could be/maybe could’ve been bought at the time of order of the camper. In my case, I think in 2011, ATC wasn’t doing lift struts, or Yakima racks rails, but they probably were doing rear wall steps and rear facing spot lights (at least if requested by customers). Anyway, I decided I wanted those items, so I made an appointment with the guys just after the first of the year to get them done.
As reported in another post, I showed up at 9 AM, and was out the door at ~11:30, with lots of work and BS-ing done. I opted for the full length Yakima rails on the roof. I currently have a Yakima rail system on my camper shell that was our primary shelter prior to the Cougar, so moving the mounts and bars will be very easy. I went for the full length so I would have greater flexibility/expandability down the road for additional racks, or solar panels (god forbid), or whatever I might need.
I probably could've done the rails myself, but since it entails drilling holes in the roof, I opted to let ATC do it. They’ve done a ton of them, know the tricks to be sure there are no leaks, and to be sure the rails are nice and straight. Both key concerns…
The rear spots I explained in an above post. They knew where to drill, and where to find the hot lead and put the switch (both also KIND OF important). They did a great job there, and then I could grab the power from their work to make my area lighting successful.
The gas struts, I opted to do myself. I bought the 30 lb units ATC normally installs from them, got some pointers from Jeff as far as placement, and they came out great, and work well, though with an empty roof, they can be more of a deterrent, than a help. Right now, we have to pull the roof down, so I attached some short straps to the “push” panels to assist that, but when we have our 2 kayaks on the Yakima rack, it should be well balanced toward lifting and lowering.
To mount the struts, I measured the suggested by Jeff distance away from the outside edge of the camper (~8”), mounted the top pivot, then raised the roof, and mounted the bottom pivot where the strut was fully extended, minus about a 1/2”.
I think they are a good addition, though maybe unnecessary for a few more years, as lifting the roof isn’t really a big deal for me or my wife. Guess we’ll see…
I also opted to mounted my own rear steps. Once I got the info from Marty as far as where there was structural aluminum, and realized that they need to be drilled and bolted all the way through the camper wall, I figured it'd be no big deal. And it wasn’t.
I bought the steps from ATC, though they are available all over the internet, and you can even get them in pure stainless if that suits you. The driver’s side lower step is bolted right next to the door frame, about 16” up from the door sill height. The bolts come through into the short section of rear wall between the door and the wall that the furnace is mounted behind. ATC uses just washers to back the bolts (which I’m sure is more than adequate), but I opted to make some backing plates out of 2” x 3/16” aluminum bar stock. Its nice and light, easily bought at my local Ace Hardware, and provides greater surface area than washers, and adds “compressional” strength in addition to the “sheer” strength of the bolts, and since I’m 200+ pounds, I wanna know that those steps are gonna support me.
The drivers upper step mounts directly next to the trim at the edge/corner of the camper, and the bolts come through into the space behind the fridge, so they are easily accessed. The passenger side steps are basically in the position as the drivers, except the lower step has to mount to the outside edge of the lower wall of the camper in order not interfere with opening the door. Its bolts come through into my rear compartment, and the upper step bolts come through the rear wall. They all have the backing plates, and use a jam nut for tightening, and an acorn not for aesthetics.
And since I had steps to allow me to climb the rear wall, I figured I bet have something to hold onto when I got there. So I mounted couple of simple grab handles on the upper portion of the rear wall, through the channel aluminum. I used the same method to back the through bolts as the steps, but I added a couple of aluminum plates between th handles and the siding of the camper, again, to spread the surface area out. On both the steps and handles, I used white 3M Marine silicone sealer (same stuff as ATC uses) to be sure leaks are averted.
Coming next: Shovel mount and CO2 tank bracket……