Background: I wanted a mat or carpet solution that would be easy to remove from our rig for cleaning purposes. We almost always boondock, we are often chain-sawing and hacking our way through the wilderness, and I cannot use a vacuum because we don't have shore power for weeks at a time. I have to remove any mats or rugs I use, and get the dirt out of them the old fashioned way - by beating them.
| I am not the very last person on earth to remember this Les Nessman quote, but I'm really, really close, as evidenced by the fact that I can't find a decent meme of it, or even a complete reference. |
To this end, I did NOT want a conventional fitted rug such as this one:
Whatever I put in there has to be removable in pieces and has to stand up to being beaten, scrubbed, and sprayed off with a garden hose. Conventional carpet cannot be treated that way, but Flor carpet tiles get pretty good reviews in that regard. They stand up to a lot.
One caveat on a Flor installation in a van like ours: The tiles are stiff and will not conform to the shape of table receivers if you have them installed in your floor. Ours had two in the rear section, but I stopped needing them when we installed our Lagun table (see here). So I first had to remove those:
| And I'm glad I did, because the chassis holes need some remedial attention. |
| Hey, there's the label on the Onan generator which was installed under this section of floor. |
| Ugh... the usual good OEM job on sealing the subfloor and chassis frame itself. Thanks, Airstream. |
| Rodents would have a name for these holes - "Stairway to Heaven". I'll have to get thin sheet metal patches while I figure out what to do with them longer term. |
So here's a few shots of my initial configuration. Note that I have two tiles overlapped in front of the slider. I have to cut one of them down to size, but I haven't done that yet.
| They coordinate with the existing cab carpet, even while adding a bit of pattern to what is otherwise a design composed of solids. I think they suit the van. |
I don't mind the discontinuous appearance - it does break up the long linear hallway.
The remaining question is -- how am I going to attach these, either to each other in three groups, and/or to the floor? How will I NEED to attach them?
I'm not sure yet. The carpet backing is very dense and they are not very slippery, even as loose individual tiles. Watch as I try to scoot this one around:
If I can figure out an unobtrusive way to bind them to each other (in groups of 3, 3, and 1.5, the last being in front of the slider), I may not need to attach them to the floor at all. They might stay put by themselves without assistance.
Anyway, that's a recap of stage one of this process. I'll figure out what to do next by using these carpet tiles in practice and seeing how they perform.
| WKRP is so old that it hasn't been meme'd decently at all. |
No comments:
Post a Comment