The trailer looks great, you guys did a really nice job! My only gripe would be the wood stove, putting some flat stones down as a hearth and then turning it 45 degrees to the corner so the fire and light can be enjoyed by those sitting in the 'living' area would be much more enjoyable over having it point at the wall next to the front door.
❤ the project! but plz make a low ventilation hole in the living room, and a high one in the bedroom. It will help a lot against condensation and might save you from CO poisoning. i built a cabin on wheels myself, has four ventilation holes and (2 low and 2 high) and zero moist problems. your fridgebox is very airtight and small space, like living in a tupperware box, ventilate plz!
Not sure if it was mentioned but I hope you let that cement dry thoroughly before filling up the basin. Also if nobody mentioned that metal copper cap will react with the metal stainless steel and quickly corrode, it's called Galvanic corrosion. Try to find an old Stainless ball valve and put that on the drain pipe, then you can just twist the handle to open and close it.
@@georgeattig8088 Brass is an alloy and is mainly copper with a bit of zinc. Either a copper cap or brass cap will corrode the pipe. I only mention it so they maybe able to find a different metal or maybe a PVC cap they can use so not to make the stainless pipe he just cemented in corrode faster than nature intended.
Here to second this. Stainless steel & copper react badly. If stainless isn't an option, then a plastic cap. And no, they didn't give the concrete any time to cure. The spring was flowing, he capped it right when he finished the wet concrete, and the time lapse shows it filling in a few days.
The stove in the trailer will need air to burn, there needs to be a vent to allow air in because the doors and windows are so tightly sealed - no gaps! Without ventilation, anyone inside will eventually suffocate: especially if they fall asleep with the stove lit.
Yoo I nearly died to CO-Poisoning (monoxide) once, the chimney sweep guy saved our lives. Please please be careful with ventilation in regards to the stove!
I'm a bit worried about the back of the stove being nearer wood. I would likely switch the panel with the aluminum to be directly behind the stove so it reflects heat back into the space. The sides won't get as hot as the back if the draft is correct.
They may have an extra piece of aluminum and just add it. Or build ceramic tile. I feel like some of the ceramic roof tiles could be made into a good heat reflector.
Great jobs everybody. I had a little chuckle to myself when Dave was repairing the basin and you played "Once in Royal David's City" clearly not a coincidence!
A cheap additive that makes a HUGE improvement in the strength and waterproofness of repair mortar is latex. It also helps reduce cracking. The drawback is slower hardening times.
No.1 loved the country music of British Christmas anthem xx. No2 The water trough is kept up on cleaning etc it should become a lovely source. No.3 the mold from the old butchers van, if you make sure there are dehumidifiers in the room then mold will not be an issue and it will only bet the colder months xxxx. Thanks from old lady in 🇬🇧 😊😊😊😊😊
There are several things I would have offered to improve on this "repurposing" but all in all...for what this is...your team has done an excellent job with this project. Your awareness of possible venting and interstitial moisture issues is a huge element that most tend to ignore, and that alone can make architecture like this function better and/or for longer than what most folks get out of them...All in all...WELL DONE!!!
A small nursery of native shrubs and trees to later plant in areas that are being cleared of mimosas would not only be a good use of otherwise unused water but might also help with erosion both there by the water basin but also in their future homes on hillsides.
@@Joaopinetreewhat about wasabi. That's a plant that needs a constant flow of fresh water and while it might be a bit difficult to grow, it would probably fetch a good price and can be put towards more projects
Nice result with the cold storage truck - it's looking so cozy! The exterior surface looks like it would take paint really well - maybe someone artistic could do a mural?
I think you should put a marble slab or granite slab underneath the stove instead of that ugly thin metal thing is which is just gonna end up absorbing and transferring heat onto the floor because thats what metal does
The one at the bottom that you for you use to clean it out with put on put a shut off valve on it. That way you can just open the shut off valve and then close the shut off valve, and then that way you won't have to worry about capping it off, because it'd be harder to take the cap off and fight the water it was spray you in the face. But you need to put a shut off valve on it that way. When you open it, it'll just come right out and you can put hoses on it and let it run where you want to your garden or whatever
Hydraulic cement is what you really want to hold water back, but honestly I'd go into the back of that big tank and build a dam right in front of it with plastic or stone/block and cement or something covered with hydraulic cement and then run a pipe from that into a plastic tank lower than the spring by enough distance to fill the whole thing up, and run an overflow off of that. If it's protected from the Sun plastic will never crack and crumble. One spring and a 275 gallon IBC tank is relatively cheap and will provide water for a household of 2 easily. A larger tank or a better flowing spring will do more You can chain multiple IBC tanks together to have a bigger reservoir. It will probably be cheaper than a proper fix for the concrete. And last 50 years longer. That concrete is in rough shape.
eu acho incrível o esmero que voces colocam em cada projeto que se propoem a fazer, é lindo ver o cuidado que vocês tem com cada detalhe, vou sentir falta dos updates no inverno
Trailer took a lot of expert work. My husband and father were master craftsmen but most people cannot build windows. Interesting to watch how you used all the recycling materials. My favorite was the lower paneling which looked like recycled doors. We have a 4000 sq ft house in Oregon with two families on each level. All cabinet doors are from a group of 500 wood doors when the builder was switching to more modern cheaper product in 1981.
I would strongly suggest that you place some anti-seas on the treads of the pipe and brass cap for the drain. Because you will get galvanic corrosion on the threads and it’ll be pretty darn hard to get that cap off the next time you want to drain that tank.
Kool❄️❄️House is Fantastic, Congrats!!!! Love all the meticulous woodwork, basketball floor wood, walls and the amazing door& windows. Bravo🏁🏁👍Dave , the Pond was a huge success. 1 way to help keep it free of unwanted dirt to use digger to dig the high dirt , cut down below the top of the walls. Push the excess dirt below the pond👍. Be blessed All at Project Kamp!!🙏🙏🙏
Great job. Living in Myrdtuguberget that famous architect Ralph Erskine drew we have chimney looiing ventilation on the roofs. As it is especially windy there these chimney looking ventilation are also attatched with four metal strings so that they dont blow over. You have only one that helps with the weight in one direction. Downwards. I think you would need two strings diagonally to the fridgebox wall to protect the chimney from strong winds.
Dave and company, I have an idea to test the spring's water flow. If you make a dam at the base of the spring, maybe with a similar mechanism you have at the natural pool. The height the water fills to in that section is the same the spring can fill the basin to (since that's the pressure head of the spring), and it would be much faster to fill because the flow rate of the spring is low. The dam can also be used to close off and empty the basin for any additional repairs/modifications. Thanks for another great season, and for showing the journey to a more sustainable lifestyle.
On that wood stove, if you build a rock wall behind it, on two sides, with as many gaps as possible (or you can use thick wire screen and pour gravel behind it) you can store a LOT of heat. It also keeps a small space from heating up so fast when you start a fire, because the cold rocks absorb some of the heat. It's really good as a safe thermal mass in a small space. Not sure about the weight in a trailer, but I assume it can manage it if it used to haul frozen cargo as that is very heavy. It will collect dust, but you can blow it out once in a while.
Have you thought about the ventilation of the fridge box? Freezer transports are usually meant to be airtight to use less cooling... So if you're using a fireplace inside you're possibly prone to a CO poisoning...
I was the maintenance man at an apartment complex, and rebuilding a windo from scratch, isn't as easy as most folks think! Having the table saw and all the other equipment, is needed, but not necessary! The right hand tools, in the right hands, can achieve the proper angles and tight joints, with a bit more time! Completely reconstructed 2 double hung sash, and frames in 5 days! Nice framing and joinery!
Ya'll are the coolest group of people I follow 😊. There's just so much talent between all of you! Also, I would like to add that you should probably add a dehumidifier and airpurifier due to the presence of mold, if you're not going to treat the mold.
Hi, just a suggestion if you do get a new stove, purchase one with a larger glass face in order to allow heat to escape through that point. Also, i think the concrete board behind and underneath the stove will protect the interior. Great job ❤
Water trough cleaned out and simple repairs done. Monitoring. Some more landscaping, clean-up and stairs rebuilding required. If deemed worthy to further repair and upgrade, an overhead cover for leaf protection. The insulated trailer home is almost complete. Maybe some interior sanding and repainting to brighten the interior and vary from the brown paneling. Winter will determine how warm both interior areas are. How much condensation and possibly mold develops.
The ground is constantly shifting, which causes the cracks to appear. They will likely reappear over time. I recommend using polymer-based materials that can accommodate this movement and won’t break like concrete. Some of these materials can even be painted to match the wall.
You know what would be a cool idea? Take one or a few of these big 20L plastic water bottles/cans and use a rams pump to pump the overflow into the bottles, with the bottles being placed higher, so you have something like these big and high water tanks that you find in old towns or villages. Idk, just a cool idea
💡💡💡 ¡¡¡¡¡ SUPER IDEA ADRIAN !!!! el fridge box por fuera es bastante horrible... imáginalo con mosaicos hechos de azulejos hechos por los voluntarios de Project Kamp; sería un bonito proyecto y quedaría aesthetic 🌟 portugal tiene industria de azulejos, entonces seguramente podriais conseguir contactos con alguna empresa para los restos , por ejemplo :) 💡💡💡
lol i cant beleive they are going to use that thing...all they had to do was tear out the walls and roof and floor and start from the metal frame.....probably wouldve been equivalent ork and cost basically...feel sorry for whomever lives in there
Love love the water tank clean out and repair. Love the fridge box. It’s beautiful. Such fine woodworking. Can’t wait for spring. See you then. Oh wait! One more update thanks!!
Hope your water basin fills up, but I would still try to keep it full as an emergency source in case of fire. Fridge box looks good. I would have placed stones around the bottom and back a thermal sink to keep it warm during the night.
The trailer looks great but I don’t know how much snow ❄️ you will have or even how much rain? In saying that I would recommend maybe putting a slite bit of a slope on the roof for run off to catch and use also to prevent the roof from caving in, they are not built for heavy loads on the roof. Good luck 🤞 just a little suggestion to think about! Fabulous work or reuse ♻️ of products for your projects 🥰
Aluminium is a great conductor of heat so the heat will get through to the timber. Stone, slate, concrete or tiling would be a far better insulator. Also, is that the best position for the woodstove? It looks really awkward and too close to the door where people are coming in and out (safety hazard).
I started watching in the middle, then had to go back to the beginning logged into UA-cam so I could subscribe and pass out the likes. Three months I'm finally caught up, just in time for the last videos of the season. Hoping you keep your camera handy for "what we did over the winter" when the new season begins. Not sure if you used hydraulic cement on those patches but it will be interesting to see how they hold up overwinter. If you continue to show seepage in the ground surrounding the basin, it may indicate the basin flooring is cracked/crumbling or in need of a heavy sealant. Crossing my fingers that next week will be an updated roof for the ruin before the rains kick in.
Isolation is very important, but on the same level is ventilation: the more isolation, the more effort you need to put in ventilation.... especially when you have a woodstove in your room.
Perhaps a de-humidifier would be a good thing to install in the fridge home to help with possible mold problems? Human habitation does create a lot of humidity, especially in the winter months.
dehumidifiers are really not "green" things. You need constant power to use them. Its a waste of resources. Properly built ventilation and airflow and properly used materials give power free solution that works 24/7 till the end of the building. Thats the better way.
@@KK-xz4rk dehumidifiers can be a good thing. The power doesn't need to be constant and the power they use, ends up heating the space anyways. It may be more green to spend 1 kWh a day to run dehumidifier than using 10 kWh of energy to heat the home to a higher temperature just to avoid moisture. This is especially true if weather is moist and just slightly cold, like 16°C and 100% humidity outside and 20°C inside. If you run a dehumidifier, you will not need heater at all. But just by ventilation, the moisture inside will increase and you will need to heat the space...
3:11 hey! Editor... Interesting, innovative, humourous, informative. Surprising. good stuff. so thumbs up from me. Sending you good karma /vibes / a quick hug / high five.
Thats cool! The level should still rise, if you see flow downstream of the spring, if so you are probably still losing water and it would be cool if you guys build a lower secondary basin, so you have a year round water suply.
I love all of your videos, theyre so well done. Alway when i get home from training on monday I can enjoy these beautiful videos to chill out. Thank you guys
3 дні тому+2
neglect cover gems, sometimes all you need is a little work. goed gedaan met die waterbron, youngen! succes! 🤠😎
Make a dam at smaller end and pump the water out. Then repair the larger area. The smaller area looks like it had a way to slide in a water gate to block the water flow for cleaning. Lay a new layer a concrete on the floor and patch the holes and cracks in the walls. Add a drain valve in a low end , to let the water out. Sorry, my ideas were before watching the rest of the video.
Project Kamp: all the values we hold dear. Salvaging, re-purposing, recycling, and crafting a real human life. Compare this to modern lifestyles in 1st world countries: buy new, discard to garbage, pretend recycling and pay manufacturers & professionals for everything. We love the craftsmanship, ingenuity and collaborative creativity that Project Kamp demonstrates every episode. It's inspiration to us on our own projects.
Hey guys. Concrete is not waterproof by itself. You need an additive like sika-1 in the mix. I’m not an expert but I would fill the cracks will acrylic sealer, then add 2 layers of webber waterproof mortar mix and a layer of fiberglass mesh in between, maybe a synthetic tarp in the bottom covering the corners before the mortar. That should do it for that water tank
I think next season you should have a professional voiceover! They're not exceedingly expensive now, and it will help with video consistency and viewer retention.
Next weeks episode is the last of the season?😢
How come?
Should we all unsubscribe now for the off season? 😮
@@georgeattig8088 yeah because new season will start in april.
Noooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo! :c
@@MeiSdeepThanks, will do.
The trailer looks great, you guys did a really nice job!
My only gripe would be the wood stove, putting some flat stones down as a hearth and then turning it 45 degrees to the corner so the fire and light can be enjoyed by those sitting in the 'living' area would be much more enjoyable over having it point at the wall next to the front door.
❤ the project! but plz make a low ventilation hole in the living room, and a high one in the bedroom. It will help a lot against condensation and might save you from CO poisoning. i built a cabin on wheels myself, has four ventilation holes and (2 low and 2 high) and zero moist problems. your fridgebox is very airtight and small space, like living in a tupperware box, ventilate plz!
Not sure if it was mentioned but I hope you let that cement dry thoroughly before filling up the basin. Also if nobody mentioned that metal copper cap will react with the metal stainless steel and quickly corrode, it's called Galvanic corrosion. Try to find an old Stainless ball valve and put that on the drain pipe, then you can just twist the handle to open and close it.
Is it copper or brass? Brass fittings may be more available, and cost efficient, in their area.
@@georgeattig8088 Brass is an alloy and is mainly copper with a bit of zinc. Either a copper cap or brass cap will corrode the pipe. I only mention it so they maybe able to find a different metal or maybe a PVC cap they can use so not to make the stainless pipe he just cemented in corrode faster than nature intended.
Here to second this. Stainless steel & copper react badly. If stainless isn't an option, then a plastic cap. And no, they didn't give the concrete any time to cure. The spring was flowing, he capped it right when he finished the wet concrete, and the time lapse shows it filling in a few days.
No wonder it dosent hold water
Great video do not forget the fire needs ventilation and a carbon monoxide alarm 😊
@@remog38 yes! Carbon monoxide alarms save lives! You never know there isn't enough ventilation till it's too late
Imagine painting a mural on the outside of the fridge box! That'd be beautiful.
MC Escher inspired.
paint it to look like the surrounding forest
The stove in the trailer will need air to burn, there needs to be a vent to allow air in because the doors and windows are so tightly sealed - no gaps!
Without ventilation, anyone inside will eventually suffocate: especially if they fall asleep with the stove lit.
Needs a Carbon Monoxide alarm?
Yoo I nearly died to CO-Poisoning (monoxide) once, the chimney sweep guy saved our lives.
Please please be careful with ventilation in regards to the stove!
I'm a bit worried about the back of the stove being nearer wood. I would likely switch the panel with the aluminum to be directly behind the stove so it reflects heat back into the space. The sides won't get as hot as the back if the draft is correct.
They may have an extra piece of aluminum and just add it. Or build ceramic tile. I feel like some of the ceramic roof tiles could be made into a good heat reflector.
Great jobs everybody. I had a little chuckle to myself when Dave was repairing the basin and you played "Once in Royal David's City" clearly not a coincidence!
the fridge box looks Awesome everyone did wonderful (recycling ) creating the home..
The trailer is so cute on the inside! I love the mismatched drawers!
The best part of my Mondays.
Agreed.
Couldn't agree more
us Aus folk are forced to wait until Tuesdays! I still look forward to it each week
A cheap additive that makes a HUGE improvement in the strength and waterproofness of repair mortar is latex. It also helps reduce cracking. The drawback is slower hardening times.
Julien is amazing, so patient and meticulous.
Such beautiful craftsmanship on the paneling and windows!!
No.1 loved the country music of British Christmas anthem xx. No2 The water trough is kept up on cleaning etc it should become a lovely source. No.3 the mold from the old butchers van, if you make sure there are dehumidifiers in the room then mold will not be an issue and it will only bet the colder months xxxx. Thanks from old lady in 🇬🇧 😊😊😊😊😊
There are several things I would have offered to improve on this "repurposing" but all in all...for what this is...your team has done an excellent job with this project. Your awareness of possible venting and interstitial moisture issues is a huge element that most tend to ignore, and that alone can make architecture like this function better and/or for longer than what most folks get out of them...All in all...WELL DONE!!!
The trailer conversions are some of my favorites. I am impressed by the skills PK folks have.
Always impressed with the carpentry and cabinet work.
Great video again. Why don't you plant a crop next to the basin that can grow from the water that overflows?
watercress should be an option to plant.
A small nursery of native shrubs and trees to later plant in areas that are being cleared of mimosas would not only be a good use of otherwise unused water but might also help with erosion both there by the water basin but also in their future homes on hillsides.
Veggies is better
@@Joaopinetreewhat about wasabi. That's a plant that needs a constant flow of fresh water and while it might be a bit difficult to grow, it would probably fetch a good price and can be put towards more projects
They only grow herbs, and not very well.
Nice result with the cold storage truck - it's looking so cozy! The exterior surface looks like it would take paint really well - maybe someone artistic could do a mural?
So happy to see materials reused instead of landfilled! You guys are great inspiration. 👍👍
Julien, you are a true craftsman!
absolutly love the custom cabinet whit those mix matching drawers!!!!
Banjo Christmas carols was a wild choice of backing track
reminded me of season 1 banjos... good times
this music is straight suicidal. also f*ck christmas, if you are a grown *as person you hould stay away from this hollywood/kiddie holiday.
I think you should put a marble slab or granite slab underneath the stove instead of that ugly thin metal thing is which is just gonna end up absorbing and transferring heat onto the floor because thats what metal does
Such an easy thing to check on the internet how to do!!
The one at the bottom that you for you use to clean it out with put on put a shut off valve on it. That way you can just open the shut off valve and then close the shut off valve, and then that way you won't have to worry about capping it off, because it'd be harder to take the cap off and fight the water it was spray you in the face. But you need to put a shut off valve on it that way. When you open it, it'll just come right out and you can put hoses on it and let it run where you want to your garden or whatever
Letting Dave do anything with water is just plain funny. Always some long process with an easily foreseen non ending......
Hydraulic cement is what you really want to hold water back, but honestly I'd go into the back of that big tank and build a dam right in front of it with plastic or stone/block and cement or something covered with hydraulic cement and then run a pipe from that into a plastic tank lower than the spring by enough distance to fill the whole thing up, and run an overflow off of that. If it's protected from the Sun plastic will never crack and crumble. One spring and a 275 gallon IBC tank is relatively cheap and will provide water for a household of 2 easily.
A larger tank or a better flowing spring will do more
You can chain multiple IBC tanks together to have a bigger reservoir. It will probably be cheaper than a proper fix for the concrete. And last 50 years longer. That concrete is in rough shape.
eu acho incrível o esmero que voces colocam em cada projeto que se propoem a fazer, é lindo ver o cuidado que vocês tem com cada detalhe, vou sentir falta dos updates no inverno
Trailer took a lot of expert work. My husband and father were master craftsmen but most people cannot build windows. Interesting to watch how you used all the recycling materials. My favorite was the lower paneling which looked like recycled doors. We have a 4000 sq ft house in Oregon with two families on each level. All cabinet doors are from a group of 500 wood doors when the builder was switching to more modern cheaper product in 1981.
Hurrah for the pressure washer and Dave!
I would strongly suggest that you place some anti-seas on the treads of the pipe and brass cap for the drain. Because you will get galvanic corrosion on the threads and it’ll be pretty darn hard to get that cap off the next time you want to drain that tank.
Kool❄️❄️House is Fantastic, Congrats!!!! Love all the meticulous woodwork, basketball floor wood, walls and the amazing door& windows. Bravo🏁🏁👍Dave , the Pond was a huge success. 1 way to help keep it free of unwanted dirt to use digger to dig the high dirt , cut down below the top of the walls. Push the excess dirt below the pond👍. Be blessed All at Project Kamp!!🙏🙏🙏
Love the Christmas Carol guitar music. Great accompaniment!
Everything looks great, but that cabinet was the star for me ❤. Excellent job👍
Great job.
Living in Myrdtuguberget that famous architect Ralph Erskine drew we have chimney looiing ventilation on the roofs. As it is especially windy there these chimney looking ventilation are also attatched with four metal strings so that they dont blow over.
You have only one that helps with the weight in one direction. Downwards. I think you would need two strings diagonally to the fridgebox wall to protect the chimney from strong winds.
tin/sheet metal and pavers (flat cement stepping stones) for the wood stove hearth.. We set ours up this way in ALASKA!
Dave and company,
I have an idea to test the spring's water flow.
If you make a dam at the base of the spring, maybe with a similar mechanism you have at the natural pool. The height the water fills to in that section is the same the spring can fill the basin to (since that's the pressure head of the spring), and it would be much faster to fill because the flow rate of the spring is low. The dam can also be used to close off and empty the basin for any additional repairs/modifications.
Thanks for another great season, and for showing the journey to a more sustainable lifestyle.
On that wood stove, if you build a rock wall behind it, on two sides, with as many gaps as possible (or you can use thick wire screen and pour gravel behind it) you can store a LOT of heat. It also keeps a small space from heating up so fast when you start a fire, because the cold rocks absorb some of the heat. It's really good as a safe thermal mass in a small space. Not sure about the weight in a trailer, but I assume it can manage it if it used to haul frozen cargo as that is very heavy. It will collect dust, but you can blow it out once in a while.
Have you thought about the ventilation of the fridge box? Freezer transports are usually meant to be airtight to use less cooling...
So if you're using a fireplace inside you're possibly prone to a CO poisoning...
all that silt/mud from the water basin would be great on your vegie gardens
feels like this house represents spirit of the project quite well
The water basin is fascinating.
I'd recommend a semi stiff metal mesh for the cracks on the basin
and some hydraulic cement
fill holes with rocks first before any mortar, old timey methods work.
Inderdaad, je moet de juiste soort cement gebruiken. Deze om kelders af te dichten is ideaal.
I was the maintenance man at an apartment complex, and rebuilding a windo from scratch, isn't as easy as most folks think!
Having the table saw and all the other equipment, is needed, but not necessary!
The right hand tools, in the right hands, can achieve the proper angles and tight joints, with a bit more time!
Completely reconstructed 2 double hung sash, and frames in 5 days!
Nice framing and joinery!
You guys should watch episodes on THIS OLD HOUSE...they will teach you everything you should do when adulting.
Ya'll are the coolest group of people I follow 😊. There's just so much talent between all of you!
Also, I would like to add that you should probably add a dehumidifier and airpurifier due to the presence of mold, if you're not going to treat the mold.
Hi, just a suggestion if you do get a new stove, purchase one with a larger glass face in order to allow heat to escape through that point. Also, i think the concrete board behind and underneath the stove will protect the interior.
Great job ❤
Water trough cleaned out and simple repairs done. Monitoring. Some more landscaping, clean-up and stairs rebuilding required. If deemed worthy to further repair and upgrade, an overhead cover for leaf protection.
The insulated trailer home is almost complete. Maybe some interior sanding and repainting to brighten the interior and vary from the brown paneling. Winter will determine how warm both interior areas are. How much condensation and possibly mold develops.
The ground is constantly shifting, which causes the cracks to appear. They will likely reappear over time. I recommend using polymer-based materials that can accommodate this movement and won’t break like concrete. Some of these materials can even be painted to match the wall.
You know what would be a cool idea? Take one or a few of these big 20L plastic water bottles/cans and use a rams pump to pump the overflow into the bottles, with the bottles being placed higher, so you have something like these big and high water tanks that you find in old towns or villages. Idk, just a cool idea
You should have installed the wood burning stove at an angle in the corner so it projects into the room instead of facing the opposite wall .
You need to buy a “scoop shovel” to clean out muck like in the basin. It will make cleaning up sloppy wet messes like that so much easier.
💡💡💡
¡¡¡¡¡ SUPER IDEA ADRIAN !!!!
el fridge box por fuera es bastante horrible... imáginalo con mosaicos hechos de azulejos hechos por los voluntarios de Project Kamp; sería un bonito proyecto y quedaría aesthetic
🌟
portugal tiene industria de azulejos, entonces seguramente podriais conseguir contactos con alguna empresa para los restos , por ejemplo :)
💡💡💡
Probably wouldn't hurt to put a corrugated metal roof on the mold trailer just in case.
mold trailer... lol
lol i cant beleive they are going to use that thing...all they had to do was tear out the walls and roof and floor and start from the metal frame.....probably wouldve been equivalent ork and cost basically...feel sorry for whomever lives in there
Second to last video of the season?! That went by fast. Gonna miss you guys over the winter break
Love love the water tank clean out and repair. Love the fridge box. It’s beautiful. Such fine woodworking. Can’t wait for spring. See you then. Oh wait! One more update thanks!!
The trailer looks amazing, well done everyone who worked on it. Everything you do is tough but it felt like that one had a unique toughness to it :)
out of all the possibilities to live, you choose a "ex" moldy box, noice!
Cement in big holes. Put some rocks in before cementing them. Then it binds better
Hope your water basin fills up, but I would still try to keep it full as an emergency source in case of fire.
Fridge box looks good. I would have placed stones around the bottom and back a thermal sink to keep it warm during the night.
With it being all insulated and being tiny, I don't see them having trouble keeping that box warm inside haha when combined with body heat.
The trailer looks great but I don’t know how much snow ❄️ you will have or even how much rain? In saying that I would recommend maybe putting a slite bit of a slope on the roof for run off to catch and use also to prevent the roof from caving in, they are not built for heavy loads on the roof. Good luck 🤞 just a little suggestion to think about! Fabulous work or reuse ♻️ of products for your projects 🥰
Question for Q&A: have you thought about making Geodesic Dome structures out of mimosas? You could use them as living spaces.
I have nothing to say really, but I appreciate your content, and wish to help with the yt-algorithms.
Very good reuse of the fridge box! Good job, guys! You are amazing!
love the look oft the trailer inside and out, great project!
If there’s one thing Dave loves, it’s beating the life out of an old pipe 😂
next week!
Aluminium is a great conductor of heat so the heat will get through to the timber. Stone, slate, concrete or tiling would be a far better insulator. Also, is that the best position for the woodstove? It looks really awkward and too close to the door where people are coming in and out (safety hazard).
I started watching in the middle, then had to go back to the beginning logged into UA-cam so I could subscribe and pass out the likes. Three months I'm finally caught up, just in time for the last videos of the season.
Hoping you keep your camera handy for "what we did over the winter" when the new season begins. Not sure if you used hydraulic cement on those patches but it will be interesting to see how they hold up overwinter. If you continue to show seepage in the ground surrounding the basin, it may indicate the basin flooring is cracked/crumbling or in need of a heavy sealant. Crossing my fingers that next week will be an updated roof for the ruin before the rains kick in.
Maybe one of your projects could be to build a roof over the water basin to keep the dirt and leaves out of the water.
Isolation is very important, but on the same level is ventilation: the more isolation, the more effort you need to put in ventilation.... especially when you have a woodstove in your room.
If you add some milk to the cement mix it helps it stick to the old cement. Wood glue works even better
Wow she’s done a better job than the boys. Well done sweetheart fantastic work.
Excellent work team! I’m trying to be like YOU!
Perhaps a de-humidifier would be a good thing to install in the fridge home to help with possible mold problems? Human habitation does create a lot of humidity, especially in the winter months.
dehumidifiers are really not "green" things. You need constant power to use them. Its a waste of resources. Properly built ventilation and airflow and properly used materials give power free solution that works 24/7 till the end of the building. Thats the better way.
@@KK-xz4rk dehumidifiers can be a good thing. The power doesn't need to be constant and the power they use, ends up heating the space anyways. It may be more green to spend 1 kWh a day to run dehumidifier than using 10 kWh of energy to heat the home to a higher temperature just to avoid moisture.
This is especially true if weather is moist and just slightly cold, like 16°C and 100% humidity outside and 20°C inside. If you run a dehumidifier, you will not need heater at all. But just by ventilation, the moisture inside will increase and you will need to heat the space...
Absolutely brilliant. Loved this.
3:11 hey! Editor... Interesting, innovative, humourous, informative. Surprising. good stuff. so thumbs up from me.
Sending you good karma /vibes / a quick hug / high five.
Always enjoy these. My best to all the Kampers.
I love the interior of the fridge box! 👌
Thats cool! The level should still rise, if you see flow downstream of the spring, if so you are probably still losing water and it would be cool if you guys build a lower secondary basin, so you have a year round water suply.
I love all of your videos, theyre so well done. Alway when i get home from training on monday I can enjoy these beautiful videos to chill out. Thank you guys
neglect cover gems, sometimes all you need is a little work.
goed gedaan met die waterbron, youngen!
succes! 🤠😎
Julien knows his craft
What about some Portuguese tiles covering the walls of the water basin? :)
Make a dam at smaller end and pump the water out. Then repair the larger area. The smaller area looks like it had a way to slide in a water gate to block the water flow for cleaning. Lay a new layer a concrete on the floor and patch the holes and cracks in the walls. Add a drain valve in a low end , to let the water out. Sorry, my ideas were before watching the rest of the video.
always nice to see the improvement and commitment of everyone. keep it up !
If I remember correctly I think the floor in the old fridge van is where there seemed like it would potentially be some old meat juices and mold.
You guys should totally build a water wheel!
Where should they put it?
Project Kamp: all the values we hold dear. Salvaging, re-purposing, recycling, and crafting a real human life.
Compare this to modern lifestyles in 1st world countries: buy new, discard to garbage, pretend recycling and pay manufacturers & professionals for everything.
We love the craftsmanship, ingenuity and collaborative creativity that Project Kamp demonstrates every episode. It's inspiration to us on our own projects.
Great video,! I might be wrong, but think you have the T-part of the chimney the wrong way.
Thank you for another inspiring and useful update. Hope the frogs from the fixed water basin were OK and found a new home?🐸
Hey guys. Concrete is not waterproof by itself. You need an additive like sika-1 in the mix. I’m not an expert but I would fill the cracks will acrylic sealer, then add 2 layers of webber waterproof mortar mix and a layer of fiberglass mesh in between, maybe a synthetic tarp in the bottom covering the corners before the mortar. That should do it for that water tank
Will you tell us who will move into the trailers and who will stay for winter? Great Job! I will miss your Videos.
Bravo!!! Nice work. Congrats
Hi some feedback consider investing in microphone(s) it will make the video sooo much better than you think!
proper masonry technique ✔
proper masonry tools✔
proper masonry materials✔
finished product🏁💯%
Can't wait to see the year 3 recap
Can you use all the mimosa you cut to burn in the wood stove?
They probably are. That is about it is good for. Well, the blossoms have a nice fragrance.
The brass on stainless fittings is sending me
I think next season you should have a professional voiceover! They're not exceedingly expensive now, and it will help with video consistency and viewer retention.