Jason at BourbonMoth woodworking is currently doing an Airstream project too. If his experience is anything to go by, the cabinetry is going to be even more difficult than your floor was. Good luck!
I would have went overkill and gutted the whole camper including the floors. Then I would have started buying plastic panels to replace the boards with so it wouldn't rot again. For me, it will be cheaper in the long run to just spend the money and buy something that's not too old.
that's an extremely common thought process. it's also why there are so many fully gutted ones for sale! People pull everything out and realize just how much work and $$ it will be to replace everything and get overwhelmed.
Jason at BourbonMoth woodworking is currently doing an Airstream project too.
If his experience is anything to go by, the cabinetry is going to be even more difficult than your floor was.
Good luck!
I'll check it out but honestly I'm leaving almost all of my cabinetry intact. He'd probably cry at how much stuff I'm NOT fixing.
@@CalebKraftmakes To be fair, he paid a professional to do the structural stuff - cabinetry is his thing, so that's the part he took on.
You are cracking me up Caleb, demo in flip flops, that's how I roll as well. ;)😉
Always!
I would have went overkill and gutted the whole camper including the floors. Then I would have started buying plastic panels to replace the boards with so it wouldn't rot again.
For me, it will be cheaper in the long run to just spend the money and buy something that's not too old.
that's an extremely common thought process. it's also why there are so many fully gutted ones for sale! People pull everything out and realize just how much work and $$ it will be to replace everything and get overwhelmed.