TerraLiner:12 m Globally Mobile Beach House/Class-A Crossover w 6x6 Hybrid Drivetrain

biotect

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11. The Fabric Up Front: XP and Four Wheels


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Another potential concern is the question of fabric and insulation up front. Again, the format here would be a “3-sides-hard/1-side-soft” Pop-up similar to the XP camper, only much bigger:


xpsunset.jpg xp-camper-down.jpg xp-camper-up.jpg
newext7.jpg hwy395.jpg moab2.jpg


See http://xpcamper.com , and please see my previous post about the XP camper on page 7 of this thread, about half-way down, at http://www.expeditionportal.com/for...xpedition-RV-w-Rigid-Torsion-Free-Frame/page7 .

Of course, the XP camper Pop-up is actually more complicated than my attempt at a description, because the sides of the section of the camper that cantilevers over the cab are soft as well. But I don't know what else to call this kind of Pop-up…...:confused:... So until better terminology gets invented, I will probably have to stick with “3-sides-hard/1-side-soft.”

Now I've spent quite a bit of time puzzling over what sort of insulating fabric would prove suitable for such a Pop-up.

As near as I can tell, the manufacturers who make Pop-up campers that incorporate fabric will only use a very sturdy nylon. Yes, even off-road fabricators like XP and Four-Wheel – see http://www.expeditionportal.com/for...provement-on-the-Four-Wheel-Pop-up-Campers-is , http://www.fourwheelcampers.com/index.php/four-wheel-campers/interior-features/:

22222.jpg exteriorcamperpicture1.jpg windows1.jpg


It seems hard to find detailed information about the fabrics used by the various Pop-up Truck Camper manufacturers, so if anyone reading this has additional links, please post! Here I will focus just on Four Wheel Campers, because its website provides some information, and in particular, an excellent video that describes its “Arctic Pack”, an extra insulating layer on the interior (also see http://www.fourwheelcampers.com/index.php/four-wheel-campers/video-gallery/ :


arctic-package.jpg

That's certainly some beautifully sewn fabric, and no doubt very rugged!

But I wonder how insulating it might actually be in very cold weather? In other words, it's not clear whether the Four Wheel camper is "all-seasons" capable. If anyone reading this knows the answer, because they have experience using a Four Wheel camper in very cold or very hot weather, please post! The website has pictures of some campers with Pop-ups extended in a variety of climatic conditions, but again, it's unclear how one should read these photos -- see http://www.fourwheelcampers.com/index.php/truck-camper-lifestyle/photo-gallery/ .

At some point in the future I'd like to start a thread in the "Pop-Up Truck Campers" sub-section of the ExPo forum, asking exactly this question about the insulating capabilities of Truck-camper Pop-up fabric.

But for now, the next few posts will simply summarize my research thus far regarding "The Fabric Up Front". This is an important consideration and a potential weak link in the design. So it seems best to seize the bull by the horns at the outset, and demonstrate that a potentially good solution exists.



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biotect

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12. The French Fabric Up Front: The Azalai



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So far I’ve come across just one Pop-up Truck Camper that incorporates a fabric element, and yet still seems promoted as able to handle climatic extremes, namely, the Azalai.

Sure, I know about Alaskan Campers, but instead of fabric above the cab, the Alaskan camper has hard, hinged elements – see http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RipObrPujvE and http://www.alaskancamper.com/sitemap.htm. In other words, no thermally suspect fabric.

At first glance, the Azalai seems aimed exclusively at the Landrover Defender and Toyota Landcruiser markets – see http://www.azalai.co.uk/azalai-brochure.pdf , http://www.azalai.ch/Azalai_de/Presse_files/Difflock_Mag2.pdf , http://www.azalai.co.uk/concept.php , http://www.azalai.co.uk/vehicles.php , http://www.azalai.co.uk/vehiclesDetail.php?Land-Rover-Defender-130-2 , http://www.azalai.co.uk/options.php , http://www.azalai.co.uk/gallery.php , https://picasaweb.google.com/AzalaiPhotos , https://picasaweb.google.com/AzalaiPhotos/AzalaiInAction , https://picasaweb.google.com/AzalaiPhotos/AzalaiInterior ,http://www.youtube.com/user/AzalaiVideo , https://www.facebook.com/pages/Azalai/19978204694 , and http://expeditiongallery.blogspot.it/2011/06/azalai-truck-camper-land-rover-defender_13.html .

Unless of course you can read French, and you find your way over to the French website of this French-made camper -- see http://psi-azalai.com/lazalai-tout-terrain/le-concept/ . Where you will find many more galleries, and many more beautiful, high-resolution photos -- http://psi-azalai.com/lazalai-tout-terrain/interieur/ , http://psi-azalai.com/lazalai-tout-terrain/defender-110/ , http://psi-azalai.com/lazalai-tout-terrain/defender-130/ , etc. etc.

Where you will discover that the Azalai can be fabricated for G-wagens, too -- http://psi-azalai.com/lazalai-tout-terrain/mercedes-g/ . As well as for small Iveco trucks -- ht.tp://psi-azalai.com/lazalai-tout-terrain/iveco-4x4/ . And a Mercedes Sprinter -- http://www.casa-trotter.com/phpBB3/azalai-sur-sprinter-mercedes-4x4-t4064.html . And some additional possibilities -- http://psi-azalai.com/lababouch-tout-chemin/double-cab/ , http://psi-azalai.com/lababouch-tout-chemin/club-cab/ .

Gosh, in French, they'll even put one on a Ford Ranger -- http://psi-azalai.com/4x4/nouveautes/ .

And in French they will tell you a bit more about themselves -- http://psi-azalai.com/4x4/lentreprise/ . And all the interesting places that Azalais go -- http://psi-azalai.com/le-reve/4x4/ , http://psi-azalai.com/le-reve/egypte-2/ , http://psi-azalai.com/le-reve/les-images/argentine/ , http://psi-azalai.com/le-reve/les-images/nepal/ , http://psi-azalai.com/le-reve/islande/ , http://psi-azalai.com/wp-content/galerie_PSI/presse/4x4_02-2010_extremes_argentins.pdf , http://psi-azalai.com/wp-content/galerie_PSI/presse/ACTION_4x4_03-2010_terre_de_feu.pdf , http://psi-azalai.com/wp-content/galerie_PSI/presse/ACTION_4x4_04-2010_la-haut.pdf , http://psi-azalai.com/wp-content/galerie_PSI/presse/2010_01_ACTION_4.pdf , and http://psi-azalai.com/wp-content/galerie_PSI/presse/ACTION_4x4_05-2010_la_patagonie_sauvage.pdf .

Just remember that "Cliquez sur la photo pour visionner la galerie", means "Click on the image to see the gallery of photos".

And don't bother clicking on the British flag, on the French home page, hoping to get an English version of the French website. It doesn't work -- http://psi-azalai.com .:sombrero:

Aber drücken auf die deutsche Flagge, ja, das funktioniert -- http://www.azalai.ch/Azalai_de/Home.html . :wings:

In short, the Azalai seems deliberately designed for African overlanding, which means it's also designed to handle the climatic extremes of the central Sahara. One wonders whether it should even be called a "truck camper"?

Anyone for "camion-camping"?:


DEF130 - 22.jpg VOYAGE - 26.jpg DEF130 - 07.jpg
DEF110 - 10.jpg DEF110 - 03.jpg DSC00686.jpg
546815_371965749544256_32260283_n.jpg DSC00372.jpg DSC00232.jpg



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biotect

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The cabin of an Azalai is a single-piece monocoque shell made out of lightweight polyester resin, reinforced with fiberglass, and has no body joints, so it’s relatively impermeable to leaks. It incorporates 15mm of polyurethane for insulation, and is 21 mm thick overall. Not hugely thick by UniCat standards, what with their 6 cm insulated walls, but still seemingly thick enough in the Truck Camper market? And because the Azalai's shell is monocoque, there are no small gaps through which draughts might pass.

The Pop-up roof on top of of the camper box is described as unusually solid, and the product literature states that the soft sides of the roof are made from an insulated and UV blocking fabric, with an air vent/window on each side with integral insect gauze.”

The following are some interior pictures of that insulated fabric:


4MhK2A.jpg Azalai 1.jpg Azalai 2.jpg
interior-16.jpg DSC00330.jpg DSC01524.jpg


For some product reviews that describe the potential insulating capability of the Azalai, see http://www.itsgotwheels.com/azalai-expedition-camper-review/ , http://www.motorhomeplanet.co.uk/archives/5374 , http://www.4x4i.com/4x4-news/news/859-azalai-overland.html , http://www.azalai.co.uk/uploads/Practical_Motorhome_072012_001.pdf and http://psi-azalai.com/wp-content/galerie_PSI/presse/2008_05_LRW_05-2008.pdf .

The last article referenced states:

"An Eberspacher diesel heater is used for heat and hot water, and doesn't need separate fuel reserves: 'In the coldest conditions, running the heater for just 15 minutes is enough to heat the camper for an entire night.'"

For a very detailed review article in French, full of pictures, see http://www.journaldu4x4.com/?Cellule-4x4-Azalai-faite-pour , and for an explanation of the meaning of Azalai, see http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Azalaï .

Here are some YouTube videos:




The Azalai makes me think that perhaps one needn’t be too paranoid about the insulating thickness of the fabric in the TerraLiner Pop-Up?

If only because the "insulated and UV blocking fabric" shown in the photographs above does not seem all that thick. And if the Azalai can handle the Sahara, and keep its occupants warm (at night) and cool (during the day), then perhaps similar fabric on the TerraLiner would also work?

But this could be completely wrong-headed thinking, and would love to hear divergent opinions.


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biotect

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13. The NASA Fabric Up Front: Spacesuits


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I also looked into NASA space-suits, and here it only needs reminding that NASA space-suits have to accomplish an extraordinary number of tasks, including full pressurization in a vacuum, provision of oxygen and removal of carbon dioxide, protection against micrometeroids, limited protection against radiation, and waste collection – see http://www.nasa.gov/audience/foreducators/spacesuits/home/index.html, http://www.nasa.gov/audience/foreducators/spacesuits/home/clickable_suit.html , http://www.nasa.gov/audience/foreducators/spacesuits/home/challenges_spacewalking_index.html , http://science.howstuffworks.com/space-suit1.htm , http://science.howstuffworks.com/question544.htm , http://www.space.com/21987-how-nasa-spacesuits-work-infographic.html , http://www.madehow.com/Volume-5/Spacesuit.html , http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_suit .

Most remarkably, space-suits have to maintain a stable internal temperature in a thermally hostile environment, where the outside temperature can change rapidly from 248 degrees F (120 degrees C) in sunlight, to -148 F ( -100 C) in the shade – see http://science.howstuffworks.com/space-suit.htm .

And yet the fabric of space-suits is usually just 3/16 of an inch thick, or 47 mm, i.e. half a cm thick or less – see http://jumpsuitsandteleporters.com/post/92572439/spacesuits-are-approximately-3-16-thick-with-11 .

The Apollo program moon suits consisted of no less than 21 separate layers:

• A water-cooled nylon undergarment
• A multi-layered pressure suit: inside layer – lightweight nylon with fabric vents; middle layer - neoprene-coated nylon to hold pressure; outer layer - nylon to restrain the pressurized layers beneath
• Five layers of aluminized Mylar interwoven with four layers of Dacron for heat protection
• Two layers of Kapton for additional heat protection
• A layer of Teflon-coated cloth (nonflammable) for protection from scrapes
• A layer of white Teflon cloth (nonflammable)

The suit had boots, gloves, a communications cap and a clear plastic helmet. During liftoff, the suit's oxygen and cooling water were supplied by the ship.


See http://science.howstuffworks.com/space-suit3.htm , http://www.nasa.gov/externalflash/apollo40/ , http://www.nasa.gov/audience/foreducators/spacesuits/historygallery/apollo-index.html , http://airandspace.si.edu/collections/group/apollo-11 , and http://thechallenge.dupont.com/dupont/putting-science-to-work.php#space :

21-LAYERS.jpg pe_Spacesuit.jpg


Whereas the EMU used on the ISS (the International Space Station) has 13 layers:

The suit itself has 13 layers of material, including an inner cooling garment (two layers), pressure garment (two layers), thermal micrometeoroid garment (eight layers) and outer cover (one layer). The materials used include:

• Nylon tricot
• Spandex
• Urethane-coated Nylon
• Dacron
• Neoprene-coated Nylon
• Mylar
• Gortex
• Kevlar (material in bullet-proof vests)
• Nomex

All of the layers are sewn and cemented together to form the suit. In contrast to early space suits, which were individually tailored for each astronaut, the EMU has component pieces of varying sizes that can be put together to fit any given astronaut.

See http://science.howstuffworks.com/space-suit4.htm , http://www.nasa.gov/audience/foreducators/spacesuits/historygallery/station-index.html , and http://www.space.com/21987-how-nasa-spacesuits-work-infographic.html:


space-suit-components-130716c-02.jpg JaMfucY6AltfqzepFpgXBcxCo1_500.jpg


Future space-suits might look something like this (see http://www.space.com/18998-nasa-z-1-spacesuit-graphic.html ):


z1-next-generation-nasa-space-suit-121220g-02.jpg


In short, if the complex fabric that NASA uses for space suits can insulate against the extreme heat and cold of outer space, then similar fabrics should certainly work on earth, too. I am not advocating using exactly the same sequence of NASA spacesuit fabrics up front, mind you. Just noting, again, that maybe "thinner" solutions exist that could insulate well – and certainly better than standard tent, caravan, or Pop-up fabric.


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Here are some spacesuit videos, just keep you entertained.

First, some background shorts about how spacesuits work:




How to put on a spacesuit:




Russian spacesuits:


[video=youtube;UrQPOq96meY]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UrQPOq96meY [/video]

How to build a better spacesuit:


[video=youtube;XfsmEYPSTtk]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XfsmEYPSTtk [/video]

And some recent spacewalks outside the ISS:


[video=youtube;rOrzKtEW0xg]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rOrzKtEW0xg [/video]


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biotect

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For “what it really feels like to be in space” , absolutely nothing beats “Gravity”, with George Clooney and Sandra Bullock – see http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1454468/ , http://www.imdb.com/video/imdb/vi2340006169/ , http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravity_(film) , http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-e...s-other-blockbusters-look-leaden-8927020.html , http://www.theguardian.com/film/2014/feb/06/sandra-bullock-pain-gravity-oscars-george-clooney-2014 , http://www.space.com/23071-gravity-movie-sandra-bullock-review.html , http://www.nbcnews.com/pop-culture/...e-six-your-worst-space-nightmares-f8C11279236 , and http://www.wired.com/2013/11/gravity-short-film-aningaaq/ :


,


Some more recent spacewalk videos:





Ed White's first American spacewalk, Gemini Mission 4:


[video=youtube;E0_V_-LGfOw]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E0_V_-LGfOw  [/video]


Also see http://science.howstuffworks.com/7425-discovery-nasa-gemini-4-mission-spacewalk-video.htm , http://science.howstuffworks.com/astronaut-videos-playlist.htm , http://video.nationalgeographic.com/video/spacewalks-sci , http://life.time.com/history/space-walk-nasa-edward-white-makes-history-june-1965/#1 , http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gemini_4 , and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extra-vehicular_activity .

For a few more clips of space-walks, see http://www.theguardian.com/science/video/2013/dec/24/nasa-space-walk-iss-space-station-repairs-video and http://www.nbcnews.com/watch/live-video/watch-live-nasa-astronauts-perform-spacewalk-220369987697 . And for some tours and discussions of the ISS interior, see http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3kVxk6Drm2I , http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=afBm0Dpfj_k , http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RmV90BmMNMg , http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tqAXYNL32B8 , http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kOIj7AgonHM , http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=01xSKYbwQxI , http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Y9E-rVu1eo , and http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Epdz2ySd3hE .

For a bit of NASA “Right Stuff” history:



[video=youtube;DJhWbSzdggU]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DJhWbSzdggU  [/video]


That should limber up any residual mental stiffness, as we move on to NASA Aerogels….:)


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biotect

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14. The NASA Fabric Up Front, Part 2: Aerogels



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If you google search super-insulating fabric, you will inevitably hit “Aerogel”.

The following video does a pretty good job explaining what Aerogel is: an ultra-light solid ceramic material, made by removing all the liquid from a silica gel, leaving its molecular structure intact. The porous network of silicon dioxide left behind is 99 % empty air, and has superb thermal properties. Aerogel is potentially 39 times better at insulating than the very best fiberglass insulation, and in compression Aerogel is incredibly strong. But unless you see it in video, it’s hard to visualize what the material is like:




Aerogel tends to be semi-transparent, because so much of its volume is air. Photographers have had a field day illustrating the amazing insulating and compressive properties of a material that looks like “frozen smoke”:


aerogelhand-browse.jpg flame-heat-resisant-thermablok-face.jpg
Aerogelbrick.jpg aerogelmatches.jpg
aerogelcrayons.jpg Aerogelflower_filtered.jpg


See http://stardust.jpl.nasa.gov/photo/aerogel.html . Or check out these provocative videos:




If you want to read up more about Aerogel in general, see http://science.howstuffworks.com/aerogel.htm , http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aerogel, http://www.nasa.gov/topics/technology/features/aerogels.html#.U1gBXXlVn6k , http://illumin.usc.edu/printer/126/aerogel-the-insulative-frozen-smoke/ , http://www.aerogem.com/about-aerogel.html , http://www.aerogem.com/aerogel-photo-gallery.html , http://stardust.jpl.nasa.gov/overview/faq.html#aerogel , http://www.aerogeltechnologies.com/faqs , http://www.aerogel.org/?p=1128 , http://www.aerogel.org/?cat=21 , http://www.aerogel.org , http://www.aerogel.org/?p=3 , http://www.aerogel.org/?p=4 , http://www.aerogel.org/?p=103 , etc. etc. The last website seems very comprehensive, and probably has all the information about Aerogel that you could ever want.

The basic problem with Aerogel has been that, although very strong in compression, it is weak in tension, and breaks easily. The first video above illustrates this well.

Over the last few decades various solutions have been explored to render Aerogel more flexible, without sacrificing its insulating properties. Some solutions have proven more successful than others, and most recently NASA has developed a particularly promising flexible polymer Aerogel – see http://ceramics.org/ceramic-tech-to...-to-open-new-applications-for-super-insulator and http://www.gizmag.com/polymer-aerogel-stronger-flexible-nasa/23955/ :


6a00d8341c67ce53ef01287766b820970c-800wi.jpg polymer-aerogel-stronger-flexible-nasa-flexible-3.jpg 6a00d8341c67ce53ef0120a8646bea970b-800wi.jpg


But even before the most recent NASA breakthrough, the technology of “flexible Aerogels” has been undergoing commercialization for about a decade, with companies like Aspen Aerogels, Thermoblock, and Cabot Corporation leading the way.


A. Aspen Aerogels

Here are two Aspen Aerogels videos:


[video=youtube;G2TbHTU-QNs]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G2TbHTU-QNs [/video]

Aspen Aerogels is a spin-off of Aspen Systems, a NASA subcontractor estbalished in the 1990’s that makes Aerogel insulation for launch vehicles and space probes. Aspen Aerogels commercialized the technology, overcoming the difficult manufacturing problems, and now seems particularly prominent in the industrial and construction insulation markets, with its Pyrogel, Cryogel, Spaceloft, and Zeroloft products – see http://www.aerogel.com , http://www.aerogel.com/markets/oem.html , http://www.aerogel.com/markets/industrial-cold-products.html , http://www.aerogel.com/m [ATTACH=CONFIG]222728.vB[/ATTACH]arkets/industrial-hot-products.html , http://www.aerogel.com/products/overview-product.html , http://www.aerogel.com/video.html , http://www.aerogel.com/products/pdf/Spaceloft_6250_DS.pdf , http://www.aerogel.com/products/pdf/Spaceloft_DS.pdf , and http://host.web-print-design.com/aerogel/pdfs/spaceloftar3100tds.pdf .

For the application of Aspen Aerogel’s “Spaceloft” product to commercial and home insulation specifically, see http://www.aerogel.com/markets/building.html , http://www.aerogel.com/markets/building-exterior.html , http://www.aerogel.com/markets/building-interior.html , http://www.electrofixenergy.com/FlexiManager/UploadedDocuments/Aspen_Aerogels_Spaceloft.pdf , http://thermosilit.sk/file/spaceloft_technical_guide.pdf , http://advancedinsolutions.com/assets/Spaceloft-data-sheet.pdf , https://mit.ida.dk/IDAforum/u0645a/...ingsprodukter/1 - Aspen Aerogels Building.pdf , http://apps1.eere.energy.gov/buildi..._america/ns/eemtg032011_c19_aerogel_insul.pdf , and http://advancedinsolutions.com/spaceloft/ .


B. Thermoblock

Thermblock sells Aerogel insulation in strips, and seems particularly prominent in the home insulation market – see http://www.jetsongreen.com/2010/02/aerogel-ultra-thin-super-insulation.html , http://www.thermablok.com/index.htm , http://www.thermablok.com/thermal-insulation/residential-construction.htm , http://www.thermablok.com/thermal-insulation/commercial-construction.htm , http://www.thermablok.com/thermal-insulation/frequently-asked-questions.htm , http://www.thermablok.com/thermal-insulation/themablok-case-studies.htm , http://www.thermablok.com/pdf/Thermablok_ What_Is_An_Aerogel_20090601.pdf , http://www.thermablok.com/pdf/Thermablok Technical Data 03242110.pdf , and http://www.thermablok.com/pdf/Thermablok_installation__20090529.pdf .


C. Cabot Corporation

Cabot seems to be a larger corporation, and sells Aerogel technology in many different markets – see http://www.cabot-corp.com , http://www.cabot-corp.com/Aerogel/Daylighting/What-Is-Aerogel , http://www.cabot-corp.com/Aerogel , http://www.cabot-corp.com/Aerogel/Oil-and-Gas-Insulation , http://www.cabot-corp.com/Aerogel/Industrial-and-Cryogenic , http://www.cabot-corp.com/Aerogel/Building-Insulation , http://www.cabot-corp.com/Aerogel/Building-Insulation/Products/PR201005131338PM6352/ , http://www.cabot-corp.com/wcm/download/en-us/ae/ThermalWrap_350_600_800_DS_2013_v4_final lo res1.pdf , http://www.colloidaldispersions.com/resources/presentations/Nanogels.pdf , http://www.sto.de/de/home/home.html , http://www.rockwool.de/produkte/hochleistungsdämmung+aerorock , and http://www.fixit.ch/aerogel/ .

Cabot’s “daylighting” products are particularly intriguing. These use Aerogel to create innovative forms of glass, composite, and polycarbonate panels that have exceptionally high R-values http://www.cabot-corp.com/Aerogel/Daylighting , http://www.cabot-corp.com/Aerogel/Daylighting/Why-Aerogel-Solutions , http://www.cabot-corp.com/Aerogel/Daylighting/Daylighting-Systems/GN200811101557PM9892/ , http://www.cabot-corp.com/Aerogel/Daylighting/Daylighting-Systems/GN200808051426PM517/ , http://www.cabot-corp.com/Aerogel/Daylighting/Daylighting-Systems/GN200811261055AM1320/ , http://www.cabot-corp.com/Aerogel/Daylighting/Daylighting-Systems/GN200808261330PM410/ , http://www.cabot-corp.com/Aerogel/Daylighting/Daylighting-Systems/GN200811101531PM4317/ , http://www.cabot-corp.com/Aerogel/Daylighting/Daylighting-Systems/GN200808261330PM7954/ , http://www.cabot-corp.com/Aerogel/Daylighting/Project-Gallery , and http://www.cabot-corp.com/Aerogel/Daylighting/Project-Gallery/GN201305221443PM1270/ , etc.

See especially Cabot’s line of “Lumira” Aerogel blankets (formerly “Nanogel”), flexible and light-transmissive insulating blankets that can be incorporated into massive tensile structures, like the semi-transparent canopies over indoor swimming pools – see http://www.cabot-corp.com/Aerogel/Daylighting/Products/PR201105311731PM3364/ , and http://www.cabot-corp.com/wcm/download/en-us/ae/Cabot_daylighting_2013_for web.pdf , http://www.cabot-corp.com/wcm/download/en-us/ae/Lumira_LB_800_DS_2013_v4_final_lo res.pdf

The following pdf’s are especially evocative, beautifully documenting Cabot's incorporation of translucent Aerogel into roofing and glazing solutions: http://www.cabot-corp.com/wcm/download/en-us/ae/Tensotherm Brochure_11_09.pdf , http://www.cabot-corp.com/wcm/download/en-us/ae/Nanogel-DuoGard brochure 5-06.pdf , http://www.kalwall.com/cabotnanogel.pdf , http://solarinnovations.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/lumira_brochure1.pdf , and http://www.scobalit.ch/pdf/produktinformation/nanogel_Dok_en.pdf .



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biotect

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15. The NASA Fabric Up Front: Aerogel Clothing and Outdoor Gear?



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In sum, Aerogel is a proven technology, with real-world, practical applications in specific niche-markets.

However, as one might expect, once “flexible” Aerogel blankets became possible, it was a short step to imagining their use in clothing – see http://spinoff.nasa.gov/spinoff2001/ch5.html , http://inhabitat.com/nasa-new-ultra...uld-be-used-to-make-super-insulated-clothing/ , and http://www.dummies.com/how-to/content/nanoweight-clothing-that-keeps-you-warmer.html . The record here seems more mixed.

Both Aspen Aerogels and Cabot have sections on their websites dedicated to Aerogel in apparel – seehttp://www.aerogel.com/markets/outdoor.html , http://www.aerogel.com/markets/outdoor-benefits.html , http://www.aerogel.com/markets/outdoor-clo.html , http://www.aerogel.com/markets/outdoor-compression.html , http://www.aerogel.com/markets/outdoor-everest.html , http://www.aerogel.com/markets/outdoor-blanc.html , http://www.aerogel.com/markets/outdoor-wall.html , http://www.aerogel.com/markets/outdoor-death.html , http://zeroloft.com , http://zeroloft.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=23&Itemid=22 , http://zeroloft.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=15&Itemid=4 , http://zeroloft.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=6&Itemid=7 ,http://www.gzespace.com/gzenew/im/press/apparel_textile-2001.pdf , http://www.cabot-corp.com/Aerogel/Apparel , and http://www.cabot-corp.com/Aerogel/Apparel/Performance
http://www.cabot-corp.com/Aerogel/A...nner,+drier,+warmer+outdoor+gear+and+apparel/ .

But in both cases, the "apparel" sections of their websites seem somewhat dormant.

Almost a decade ago Hugo Boss tried a line of Aerogel winter jackets, but they were withdrawn because customers complained they were too hot, and the same problem seems to have bedeviled mountain boots developed for Mount Everest – see http://www.coolhunting.com/tech/aerogel.php , and http://www.oobject.com/most-extreme-clothes/nasa-aerogel-jacket/513/ :


74.jpg


Burton also tried a line of jackets, but like Boss' jackets, they were too costly. Most recently, Hannesbrads has had a crack at Aerogel technology, and perhaps might succeed where others have failed – see http://ceramics.org/ceramic-tech-to...titude-champion-supersuit-on-everest-its-warm , http://www.alanarnette.com/blog/2010/08/15/aerogel-should-geese-start-celebrating/ , http://gearjunkie.com/hanesbrands-champion-super-suit-outerwear , http://www.nbcnews.com/id/36934946/...s/t/man-climb-everest-supersuit/#.U1f8aHlVn6n , and http://www.trailspace.com/blog/2010/01/22/outdoor-retailer-thinnest-extreme-suit-for-everest.html :


100504-supersuit-hmed.grid-6x2.jpg 3394.jpg 3392.jpg


But I wonder.

If one checks out blogs that discuss Aerogel clothing, there seem grounds for doubt that the material will ever work well for clothing.

In particular, see the following very comprehensive post, dated 2012, on Backpacking Light's discussion forum (at http://www.backpackinglight.com/cgi...ml?forum_thread_id=28957&disable_pagination=1 ):

I've used Aspen's Spaceloft, Cryogel, and Pyrogel blankets and granular aerogel from Cabot in my lab and at home in MYOG projects, and it's my opinion that it will never outperform down or synthetic fiber insulation for jackets or sleeping bags.

As far as I know, all of the aerogel that has ever been used in outdoor gear to date (in POE pads, Burton jackets, insoles, gloves, etc.) has been aerogel "blanket", mostly "Spaceloft" made by Aspen Aerogels. I have a roll of this material at home and I sold some of it here on BPL a while ago. Under controlled laboratory conditions, aerogel blanket has a maximum R-value of R10/inch of thickness. The 9mm thick material weighs about 20 oz/square yard. So, an aerogel sleeping pad with an R-value of R10 would need to be constructed of a material that has a minimum areal density of about 55 oz/ square yard. Closed cell foams have a higher specific R-value (R value per unit weight) than aerogel blanket, and inflatable pads insulated with down or synthetic fibers are far higher. POE has never been honest about the R-values of its pads. Roger Caffin collaborated with another author (whose name I can't remember) on a BPL article that reported measurements of the R-value of POE's aerogel pads. The measured R-values were less than 1/3 of the R-values claimed by POE (POE claimed R20, actual was R6). 



Richard Nisley described some calculations in an old post (which I can't find now) in which he compared aerogel to down. He reported that high fill power, fully lofted down has about 50 times the R-value per unit weight of aerogel. An aerogel sleeping bag would be thinner than a down one of comparable warmth, but it would be completely non-compressible (like a sleeping bag made from closed cell foam), and it would weigh forty pounds. The same will be true of any aerogel jacket. Any cheap down jacket will be much warmer per unit weight than any aerogel insulated jacket. 



Also, flexion of aerogel blankets separates the aerogel from the polyester fiber matrix. If you hold a piece of aerogel blanket with two hands and bend it fifty times, most of the aerogel falls out as clouds of dust. This is not a problem for pipeline or building insulation applications, which only subject the material to limited flexion during installation, but for apparel this is a problem. I examined the aerogel panels from a used Burton jacket a couple of years ago, and all of the aerogel had settled out of the blanket in a heap. The aerogel panel had become nothing but a layer of polyester felt with a pouch of aerogel dust at the bottom. The same will happen with the jacket discussed in this thread. It is an intrinsic property of the material.

Many clever lamination/encapsulation methods have been used to limit the loss of aerogel dust from aerogel blanket materials, but even with encapsulation, flexion will cause aerogel dust to eventually settle to the bottom of the envelope, leaving only a polyester fiber mat at the top. Lamination/encapsulation does not inhibit the movement of aerogel particles within the polyester fiber mat. The aerogel particles will still eventually sink to the bottom. 



Aerogel sounds fancy, and axioms like "it's the worlds lightest solid" are heard frequently, but compared to down, synthetic fiber insulation, and closed-cell foams, aerogel is very heavy. It's also not compressible, and any mechanical strain turns it to dust. Aerogel jacket prototypes were first announced in the media almost twenty years ago. If aerogel truly were what we all hoped it would be, the market would be flooded with aerogel apparel by now. Every few years, another company tries to use aerogel blankets as apparel insulation (Corpo Nove, Burton, Hanes/Champion, etc.), and they were all commercial failures because conventional apparel insulation performs better. The high-tech appeal of aerogel has not yet been able to motivate consumers to buy jackets that are stiff, heavy, expensive, and less warm than conventional down jackets.


So perhaps Aerogel fabric is not the solution to “The Fabric Up Front” problem that I've been exploring. Sure, an Aerogel blanket can be curved to fit around a pipe, and then left in place, and to that extent and Aerogel blanket is “flexible”. But apparently it cannot be flexed hundreds of times in clothing – or a Truck Camper Pop-Up – without falling apart. After all, Aerogels are basically ceramic, and ceramics are not famous for tensile strength.

Still, I wanted to post all of this information about Aerogel anyway, just in case anyone reading this thread has a different opinion, and would like to post a response to this blogger's remarks. There's at least the possibility that if an Aerogel jacket could be made to work, its insulating layer would be much thinner than anything comparable in Eider Down or synthetic. The following photograph illustrates the potential difference in thickness between an Eider Down jacket and an Aerogel jacket, of comparable insulating capacity:


3393.jpg


If it could work, such a thin but powerfully insulating fabric might be ideal for the soft element in the TerraLiner's Pop-Up.

Furthermore, I wonder if anyone has thought to use Aerogel blankets as insulators for camper walls? Here Aerogel blankets would not need to flex. So perhaps Aerogel might prove thinner and even more efficient than any currently used RV insulation?

Camper insulation is a huge topic in its own right – see http://buildacampervan.com/insulation/ , http://www.campervanconversion.co.uk/campervan-insulation.html , http://www.truckcampermagazine.com/camper-tech/winter-boondocking-mods , http://www.thediyworld.com/How-To-Install-Better-Insulation-In-Campers-And-RVs.php , http://www.ar15.com/archive/topic.html?b=10&f=17&t=653040 , http://www.campervanlife.com/insulation-0 , and http://www.expeditionportal.com/forum/threads/120361-insulation-setup-who-thought-out-of-the-box . And it might be better to discuss camper insulation at length in another ExPo thread.

But even still, if anyone reading this has a technical background in Aerogels, or RV camper insulation, or both; or lots of experience with either; and if they'd like to comment on the suitability of Aerogels for RV applications, then please chime in!!



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biotect

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16. The Belgian Fabric Up Front: Living Is .Be



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Coming from a completely different direction, here are some images of a large triangular Pop-up by "Living Is .Be", with beautifully quilted insulated fabric of some kind, that also seems to be quite thick:


20071226-151244-TreeHugger-lib-hatchtocabin.jpg 1.jpg uni1.jpg
uni3.jpg 20071226-151259-TreeHugger-lib-dryingoff.jpg 20071226-141248-TreeHugger-lib-parked.jpg
truck.jpg uni4.jpg


See: http://www.designboom.com/architecture/unimog-mobile-living/ , http://www.treehugger.com/cars/living-is-be-whatever-that-means.html , and http://www.thecoolhunter.co.uk/article/detail/1127/living-in-a-truck . And for varieties of baffle construction, see http://www.nemoequipment.com/explore/technology/sleeping-bag-construction/ .

Now whether or not this quilted fabric works thermally, I very much like the visual appearance of this solution. It doesn't look antiseptic and plastic like some nylon fabrics. Even just visually it seems to say, "I will keep you warm and toasty". One could imagine it harmonizing well will the interiors of some Armadillo camper bedrooms, for instance:


PH12616812125412.jpg PH12615202639117.jpg


But I'd be a bit worried about its thickness and compressibility. If this quilted fabric is Eider Down, perhaps no problem. But otherwise? The fabric in the front of the TerraLiner's Pop-up has to reliably fold down and compress without fuss, just as successfully and easily as the fabric in the best and most reliable Pop-up Truck Campers.




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biotect

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16. The Mid-Western Fabric Up Front: IceFishing Shelters



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So I was puzzling through the problem of insulating fabric for the soft front and soft front sides of the Terraliner, when I looked briefly at the website of “Shiver Shield”, a maker of Aerogel-insulated clothing for hunters – see http://www.shivershield.com/index.php , http://www.shivershield.com/technology.php , http://www.shivershield.com/faqs.php , http://www.shivershield.com/store/index.php?cPath=22 , and http://www.shivershield.com/hunting-seats.php:


[video=youtube;yARqL0QCVpk]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yARqL0QCVpk [/video] [video=youtube;9zocS3sxi0Q]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9zocS3sxi0Q [/video]


If you are not a hunter, the logic behind this clothing may not be clear. Hunters who go after deer will often spend hours sitting quietly behind blinds, waiting for game to pass. This is the most popular method, called “stand hunting” – see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deer_hunting#Hunting_Methods_and_Seasons , http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tree_stand , and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hunting_blind. Hunting season varies by species and weapon, but in most northern American states the season for deer runs from mid-fall to early winter, and the same in Canada. So hunters will find themselves spending hours sitting in tree stands, surrounded by snow, and because they are immobile, they will get cold awfully fast. The clothing sold by Shiver Shield seems the perfect solution.

But again, I wonder if Aerogel insulation would be as flexible as one might want, for a Pop-Up? As insulation for deer hunting clothing it makes perfect sense, because hunters sitting in tree-stands don't move around much.

I am partly Canadian, and it then occurred to me that another type of sportsman also spends hours sitting in the cold: ice fishermen. In American states like Michigan, Wisconsin, and Minnesota, and so too in most Canadian provinces, “ice-fishing” is a popular pastime. I've never been ice-fishing myself, but knew that ice fishermen use portable, fabric shelters to protect themselves from wind and freezing temperatures. So I looked these up on-line.

As it turns out, there has been a bit of a revolution in ice-fishing shelter design over the last decade, made possible by new insulating products like the “Norpac Thinsulate R2 extreme weather fabric”, developed by Norpac industries in concert with 3M – see http://www.norpacr2.com/index.html , http://www.norpacr2.com/about.html , http://www.norpacr2.com/prod_test_results.html , http://www.norpacr2.com/thinsulate.html , http://solutions.3m.com/wps/portal/3M/en_US/Thinsulate_Insulation/Homepage/AboutUs/WhatIsThinsulate/ , http://www.norpacr2.com/pd.html , http://www.norpacr2.com/locs.html , and http://www.norpacr2.com/downloads/NorpacR2PressRelease.pdf :


home_03.jpg


Specialty Fabrics Review has a good short account of the product's genesis (see http://specialtyfabricsreview.com/articles/1108_f1_sports.html ):

For the ice fishing crowd, Norpac LLC of Rogers, Minn., has spent more than seven years developing NorpacR2™, a light yet rugged outdoor shelter fabric that protects users against extreme cold and wind. The idea for the product was born when ice fishers began sewing thermal blankets into the inner walls of their canvas shelters. Although the blankets kept the heat in and cold out, the shelters were stiff and heavy, making them difficult to transport and set up. To solve this problem, Norpac partnered with 3M and began using its Thinsulate™ Insulation FR, a flame-retardant version of the company's light and flexible Thinsulate Insulation. Today, Norpac is 3M's approved converter of Thinsulate Insulation FR for the outdoor shelter industry.

‘Most shelters use nylon or polyester materials with little to no R value,[ says Norpac president Matt Franta. ‘We engineer our NorpacR2 using a rugged polyester outer shell covered with a marine-grade coating. Then we layer Thinsulate Insulation FR and add a lightweight polyester inner shell.' With an R value of 1.4, NorpacR2 significantly reduces heat loss through the shelter walls, making it extremely easy to heat. Not only does NorpacR2 retain heat, it also prevents condensation inside the shelter, a common problem with single-layer fabrics, according to Franta.

In addition, NorpacR2 offers a lighter, brighter interior. ‘Most ice fishing shelters are dark inside,' Franta notes. “It may be cold but sunny outside, and you're inside a dark ice shelter all day. Our inside liner reflects light off the inside walls, creating an illuminated interior.


NorpacR2 is now used by premium fabricators of ice-shelters like Canvas Craft and Frabill – see http://www.canvascraftinc.com , http://www.canvascraftinc.com/ice-fishing-shelters/northlander-uvs , http://www.canvascraftinc.com/ice-fishing-shelters/northlander-sled , http://www.canvascraftinc.com/ice-fishing-shelters/northlander-sled-double , http://www.canvascraftinc.com/ice-fishing-shelters/northlander , http://www.frabill.com , http://frabill.com/ice-fishing , http://frabill.com/portable-ice-shelters.html?limit=39 , http://frabill.com/blog/cat/shelters/post/r2-tec-insulated-shelters/ , http://frabill.com/portable-ice-shelters/7080.html , and http://frabill.com/portable-ice-shelters/r2-tecr-thermal-guardian-2-3-anglers.html :





And the following is an opening sequence for a Canvas Craft Northlander Cabin:

1DSC_0203.jpg 2DSC_0269.jpg 3DSC_0212.jpg
4P3066764.jpg 5P3066766.jpg 6P3066767.jpg
7P3066762.jpg 8P3066722.jpg 9DSC_0295.jpg



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biotect

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Here are some more images of Canvas Craft ice-shelters, if only because they convey admirably just how wonderful NorpactR2 thinsulate looks, when it serves as the “loft” for what is, in effect, a quilted tent:


DSC_0282.jpg DSC_0276.jpg DSC_0290.jpg

1P3076785.jpg 2P3076786.jpg 3P3076787.jpg
4P2156451.jpg 4P2140105.jpg
5DSC_0326.jpg 6DSC_0071.jpg


The quilted exterior is really quite striking and attractive, isn't it?

Which is probably just as well, because it may prove unavoidable.


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biotect

Designer
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Here is the last set of Canvas Craft ice-shelter images. These images suggest how NorpacR2 Thinsulate can be neatly folded into a compressed, tight package:


3OtterskinDoubleFINALLR.jpg 2P2140123.jpg 1DSC_0329.jpg
P3066687.jpg P3066690.jpg P3076802.jpg
P3076794.jpg P3066697.jpg
P3066693.jpg P3066691.jpg


This then begins to suggest what “The Fabric in Front” of a TerraLiner Pop-Up might look like.

Maybe this is not the only solution, and if Shiver Shield is having success with its hunting clothing (which seems the case), then maybe Aerogel-insulated fabric remains a possibility, too.

But NorpacR2 Thinsulate would certainly prove a very beautiful solution.



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Just two closing, parenthetical observations.

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First, as near as I can tell there are at least 8 – 10 different manufacturers of ice-fishing shelters. For a good description of the three main ice-shelter formats, see http://www.cabelas.com/product/Ice-Shelter-Buyers-Guide/1345288.uts. And for a short buyer's guide, see http://www.in-fisherman.com/2013/11/27/great-portable-ice-fishing-shelters/.

Many or even most of these manufacturers will sell high-pricepoint “thermal” shelters, just like Canvas Craft and Frabill. But unlike Canvas Craft and Frabill, they don't seem to use NorpacR2 Thinsulate. It would be interesting to find out what sort of insulation they use instead, and how it compares to NorpacR2?

Most notably, Otter Outdoors does not seem to use NorpacR2 Thinsulate in its products, and yet Otter Outdoors is considered one of the leading fabricators of ice-fishing shelters – see http://www.otteroutdoors.com , http://www.otteroutdoors.com/icegear.html , http://www.otteroutdoors.com/portablefishhousepackages.html , http://www.rapala.com/otter/shelter...lter+Package.html?start=1&cgid=otter-shelters , http://demandware.edgesuite.net/aag...826193/downloads/otter/Otter_XT1200.pdf?id=21 , http://demandware.edgesuite.net/aag...alogs/ice-force-2013-14-ice-catalog.pdf?id=20 , and http://demandware.edgesuite.net/aag...s/catalogs/ice-force-2014-ice-guide.pdf?id=20 :





So it would seem that even though Norpac in concert with 3M sparked a bit of a revolution in ice-fishing shelter design, they do not completely control the market for high-end, “thermal” shelters.


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Second, I wrote to the Norpac Corporation asking whether any Truck-Camper, Caravan, or RV manufacturers now use their product as insulating fabric. NorpacR2 might serve well, for instance, as fabric at the front end of an XP camper, turning it into a genuine 4-season product. And the same for Four Wheel Campers.

Here's hoping that Norpac Corporation will get back to me!

All best wishes,



Biotect
 
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Overland Hadley

on a journey
But I wonder how insulating it might actually be in very cold weather? In other words, it's not clear whether the Four Wheel camper is "all-seasons" capable. If anyone reading this knows the answer, because they have experience using a Four Wheel camper in very cold or very hot weather, please post! The website has pictures of some campers with Pop-ups extended in a variety of climatic conditions, but again, it's unclear how one should read these photos -- see http://www.fourwheelcampers.com/index.php/truck-camper-lifestyle/photo-gallery/ .

I would consider a FWC a 3+ season camper.

The Turtle IV, of Turtle Expedition in the 1990's, was a Four Wheel Camper. And they traveled through Siberia with it.
http://turtleexpedition.com/vehicles/turtle-iv/

Here is a synopsis of the cold weather camping with the FWC:
Our Four Wheel Pop-Up Camper was unsuccessfully modified to handle the extreme cold of Siberia. It survived, and we survived, but in the process we again discovered the reality that despite its light weight and low profile, a pop-up camper is still a tent, best suited for temperate three-season camping. Once Spring arrived, the camper performed as expected, with the exception of annoying sidewall leaks during torrential downpours and high winds.


I will agree that in extreme cold a FWC is like a fancy tent with a heater. Still very comfortable, for some folks.


I can edit and move this post if you wish, just let me know. :)
 

biotect

Designer
Hi Overland Hadley,

No, please leave the post in place.... :)

And many thanks for confirming my suspicions about Four Wheels.

I am just trying to finish off this current series of posts about the TerraLiner before Easter break ends, and I leave sunny Palermo to return to London. So kinda cramming everything together. Once I'm done with "The Fabric Up Front" posts tomorrow, I'll be done for a bit.

It will then be egn's turn to respond to my absurdly long list of questions......:sombrero:

If you have some time, please take a look at what I just wrote about the Azalai, and let me know what you think. Does the Azalai seem 4-seasons capable to you? More capable than FWC?

And if you were looking for a really good -- but thin -- insulating fabric, where would you turn? I'll finish the post about ice-fishing shelters and Norpac thinsulate tomorrow, so maybe you could let me know what you think about that, too, if you feel inclined, and have some time. Indeed, please feel free to chime in on any and all of the questions that I've asked over the last 4 or 5 pages or so.

I've only been addressing most of my posts to egn, because he has been so enthusiastic about my project, and so helpful and supportive. Indeed, egn has become a kind of ersatz "client", for whom I now seem to be designing the TerraLiner!

All best wishes,


Biotect
 
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egn

Adventurer
I've only been addressing most of my posts to egn, because he has been so enthusiastic about my project, and so helpful and supportive. Indeed, egn has become a kind of ersatz "client", for whom I now seem to be designing the TerraLiner.

Sorry, but we are very happy with our camper. And even we were not, and it wouldn't be a CBE design :p , we wouldn't be able to afford it. :hehe:

As it is easier for me I will use metric units in all answers below.

A. The size of major tanks

It makes no sense to to put abnormally big tanks into an vehicle, because as I already have stated, we are very limited in available volume in the vehicle. So the size will be a compromise regarding the self-sufficiency which someone wants to achieve in certain environments with a specific comfort.

So your question regarding size for "two months off-grid boon-docking" is incomplete, and there is no absolute answer that is a perfect match for everyone. If you look at the sizes of freshwater, gray water and black water tanks, everything is tightly connected. The more freshwater you use, you will need larger tanks for grey- and black water, too. It also heavily depends on how efficient you are using the resources. This is not only dependent on personal comfort, but also dependent on the used appliances.

So an answer can only be given when you know all the variables in the equation and the solution is only valid for a specific user.

What I can give you are some examples regarding our camper:
1. Freshwater (2x raw water tanks a 250 l, 1x drinking water tank 150 l (filtered with 0.5 micro m, UV disinfection)
The water from outside goes into one of the water tanks, either from a pressurized source or is pumped with a build-in pump. It is only filtered regarding sand and other larger particles. The filling goes very fast as this need no large pressure and the fill rate is only dependent on the source.

The drinking water tank is then filled with a regular pump through the trinking water filter, with about 10-15 l/min. The drinking water filter can filter particles as small as 0.25 micro m (depending of type of filter element) and is a combination of micro filter and active coal. It filters particles, biological items and a wide range of organic and an-organic chemicals.
To keep the water biological inactive in the drinking water tank, there is a UV disinfection lamp installed, which is only used occasionally for a few ours if there is not much water use.

All water inside the vehicle is taken from this drinking water tank. For two adults the total of about 650 l water is good for about 14 days, including showers every two days. But normally we take bottled water as pure drinking water, then it is good for about 3 weeks. If there is a chance to take showers somewhere else the water will last much longer.

So if we take the 14 days to about 60 days, we would need about 2.500 l fresh water tank. That is far away from practical, at least not for a permanent installation. If you want to achieve that, you have to look into saving water as much as possible and probably use it mainly for drinking, without showers and use for the toilet. With 5 l/person/day then 600 l would be enough for 60 days. But this all will not be comfortable anymore and not a concept that sells in the luxury market.

2./3. Greywater (200 l) and blackwater (200 l)
The size was dictated mainly by the available volume. We have put both greywater and blackwater tanks below the floor of shower and toilet. The sum is smaller than the total size of the freshwater, because it is not to hard to get rid of both content. In western countries you often have infrastructure available and a discharge every 1-2 weeks seems to be no problem. In all not so densely populated countries, you can discharge both without much effect to the environment.

For same reason mentioned for freshwater, for me it would make no sense to put 4 times larger tanks into a vehicle.

B. Toilet

At start of the project we also thought about a composting toilet, especially because we had many years of experience with the cassette toilet. But with 4 persons traveling at that time, the cassette had to be discharged every two days. We had a second cassette for emergency, but it wasn't a delicate jobs to do the discharge, and you had to constantly look for a place to discharge them correctly. But finally the decision was against the composting toilet, because it didn't gain the the Wife-Acception-Factor (WAF).

We are very happy with the Sealand vacuum flush toilet. It works flawless, it can be used like a normal toilet and it has the advantage that only about 0.5 l water is normally used per flush. This reduces fresh water use considerably.

You wrote about reuse of shower water for toilet flushing. We have thought about this but dropped the idea because of the extra tank necessary and the problem with the odor of grey water. It may start to smell bad very fast in the toilet.

C. Showers and faucets

Regarding type of shower we see this totally different. We had a very efficient camping shower in our Concorde and were constantly annoyed that it took very long to get wet fully. Especially the ladies with their long hair needed a lot of time to get wet and to remove all the shampoo again. The total amount of water used is the product of water flow per minute and the time in minutes. You save absolute nothing by using an efficient shower head, if you have to shower longer to get fully wet or free from soap.

So we took a totally different approach by using a large rain shower. You turn it on and you are totally wet within seconds. For this we installed separate high flow pumps for cold and warm water, which is mixed by a thermostat.

543bb622bf.jpg


The same happens when you want to remove the soap. As there are separate controls for temperature and water flow, you can easily start and stop the water flow without changing temperature. One complete shower uses 10-15 l water.

Fancy faucets doesn't save any water if you have water use in mind. If you need 1 l of water for tee than you save nothing with a fancy faucet, it just takes longer. Important is that you can control the water flow easily.

So it is more of an design decision what you finally take.

What may be interesting are appliances like the Quooker, because you can save energy with it in every days use.

D. Water-making/Purification

Yachts can constantly use water makers because they a floating in water that can be used as source and at least motor yachts have a generator running constantly to provide electric power. Osmosis from salt waster is very power hungry and solar power collected by PV on a vehicle will not be enough, if you have to use electricity for other things also. Water making by osmosis takes a long time and is then only worthwhile when staying longer at the place where the water is available. Please keep in mind that with osmosis you can use only a certain percentage of the raw water, depending on the water quality. You also have to maintain the system.

For low to medium quality water found purification with filters is the way to go. There are a lot of systems available in the market with different performance. The most famous are Katadyn and Seagull. They are very costly and the water throughput is not very high compared to the cost, so most people use them only as poor drinking water source. In my opinion, if you want a larger volume then other filter solutions combined with UV disinfection are a better way to go.

E. REFRIGERATOR & FREEZER

We use 24 V fridge and freezer build for marine use, because
  • they can run without any inverter directly from the battery,
  • they are made to run in all positions seen with offroad vehicles,
  • they keep the content where it is intended to be,
  • they have reliable door locks.

Home appliance become more and more popular for RVs because they are cheap compared to the 12/24 V versions, which also use different compressor technology. Top modern home-appliance fridges are very energy efficient, but the necessary constantly running inverter will make the advantage negligible. Reliability in offroad-use may not be of concern, because there are already a lot of people using them off-road, and I didn't read any negative comments yet.

For me the other points are important. You don't want that all the items are flying around in the fridge. Look at the images you posted. Where does the content go when you drive off-road?

Function should go before design here. This doesn't mean that the appliances should look bad, bad you should always look for function first.

May be as next project you can design a nice looking off-road fridge. :)

You may find similar fridge/freezers in the commercial market, where presentation of content is more in focus then energy efficiency and functions necessary for off-road use.

What size they have to be is also heavily dependent on what cuisine you like. But the typical fridge/freezer will be always to small for two months food, if it consists mainly of fresh ingredients. Just look at home how much space you need for food for just one week. So you have to have uncooled storage space outside fridge/freezer to take enough calories and other food with you. This may be a lot of pasta, rice, flour, ... as basic carb providers, and canned food as protein and vitamin providers. Fridge/Freezer will hold only that food that really has to be cooled.

What we do for longer tips is to pre-cook and preserve main courses without side dishes in glasses, that was also done in the earlier days when fridge/freezers weren't that wide spread. The food is preserved for months at room temperature and on glass contains a main course portion for 2-3 people. You just have to heat it and cook a side dish like pasta, rice, ... . The complete meal is ready within 10-20 minutes. The storage needs no extra cooling and is done in our relatively cool cellar below the kitchen floor.

You really get the most out of the available volume if you store the base food ingredients in a way so that it needs no extra cooling. So it should be no problem to store food for 2 months outside fridge/freezer. You can the keep the fridge/freezer free for cold drinks and ice. :D

F. DIESEL KITCHEN

We never liked the idea of diesel hobs, because they are just not as comfortable as typical house-hold appliances, they do smell and they don't work at higher altitude very well. Original they were build for marine use at height zero, and at heights above 2000 m they don't work very well.

We have a normal electrical hob with Ceran surface and with mechanical switches. Induction saves energy, but adds more sources for failures. We save energy when cooking by using other appliances. I.e. we use the microwave to heat a cup of water, an electrical water kettle for heating larger amounts of water, like for cooking pasta. We use our two-sided contact grill to barbecue meat, fish, vegetables, ...

G. GE MICROWAVE / HALOGEN OVEN

We use something similar from Bosch, which combines normal oven functions with microwave. Something like this is certainly a must to make something delicious from base ingredients. It is used same as at home to bake bread and cake.

H. SPLENDIDE WASHER / DRYER

Currently don't have it on board, because for our current trips up to 6 weeks we don't need one. We have enough clothes with us and there is always a possibility to wash in between at a official camp site. Please keep in mind that washing needs a lot of energy and water, so it easier to use available infrastructure. Of course, when we will be on longer trips we will have one on board.

Here in Europe the small models of Candy are used very often. With some you can lock the drum from outside to avoid damage of the drum when going off-road.

I. DISHWASHER

This is a waste of space and resources for us.

J. HEATING and HOT WATER

We have a Webasto Thermo 90 ST diesel heater for both space heating and warm water. For warm water we have a boiler that is heated by a heat exchanger or electrically.

K. AIR-CONDITIONING

Currently we don't have air-condition, because we always like to adapt to the climate of the region we travel. But for redundancy regarding heating, we probably will add a highly efficient inverter air condition unit, combined with heat pump function.

L. SUPER THIN-FILM SOLAR & KIMBERLEY

For an integrated vehicle this is certainly the way to go. You can place solar panels everywhere. If the efficiency is as high as with regular panels, the only disadvantages are that the panels are not cooled very well and you get no advantage through the tropical roof effect when they are placed directly on the roof. Instead the hull of the vehicle is heated additional an the panels go up to the highest temperature with an efficiency drop of about 30 %.

The "innovation" of Kimberley is very old and has be used with stationary camp trailers for long time. With mounting regular panels on the roof you get this effect automatically. By design I avoided any holes in the roof, because they have disadvantages in hot and cold climate.

A kind of tropical roof should certainly be a design feature for the Terra Liner.

N. LITHIUM BATTERIES & FUEL CELLS

Lithium is certainly the way to go for energy storage in the future, but fuel cells are far away until they have a reliability of at least 100.000 h and the fuel can be conventional diesel available everywhere. I don't mean low-sulfur diesel, which is only available only in specific areas on the world.

For the diesel engine scenario you need approximately the same space as with lead-acid batteries. The size is dependent on the average daily energy usage less the available energy from solar, and the days you want to be only on battery without running the engine or a generator.

For the electric-hybrid scenario it depends mainly on the pure electrical range of vehicle, and whether the fuel engine(s) are capable enough to fully power the vehicle most time.

So you have to determine this parameters first to be able to estimate the spatial requirements.

O. DIESEL SCENARIO: SOLAR, BATTERIES, and GENERATOR

You know the parameters of the Shachagra Expedition vehicle, you should get the size by yourself through research with google. I don't have the numbers present and would have to research myself.

Regarding generator I would looking into water-cooled units where the waste heat could be used for space heating and warm water. Fischer-Panda is a good start. It is important to have a unit with low maintenance. Nobody would like to do maintenance in cold climate every few weeks. Maintenance once a year would be ok.

P. ELECTRIC/HYBRID SCENARIO: SOLAR, BATTERIES, and DIESEL GENERATOR

For an electric/hybrid you need 2 units of something like this.

You have to power the vehicle fully during travel. With highway speed you will need about 100-150 kW power on average. Off-road you will need much more, at least for peak power. A part can be supplied from the battery storage, but sometime you have to fill the storage again.

May be you can make an arrangement with Tesla regarding use of the super chargers. But of course, they will not be available in the middle of nowhere. :sombrero:

Q. DUAL HIGH-OUTPUT ALTERNATORS instead of a DIESEL GENERATOR?

We have done this for 5 years with an high power alternator and it worked fine as long as you move within the storage capacity of the battery. But if you stay longer than a week, in winter then you would have to run the engine, which is not accepted everywhere.

I also don't believe the numbers cited. It may be true that Ford engine is more silent and uses less fuel than the Fisher-Panda when the Ford is idling. But I don't believe that the alternators will produce the same power as the Fisher-Panda when it produces 4000 W. The power of alternators his heavily dependent on rpm. When the engine is idling, alternator normally deliver only a few 100 Watts. The transmission is normally designed to give the full power somewhere in the upper rpm range of the engine.

A comparison at idle is pretty useless. The comparison has to be done at a specific power output of generator and alternator.

Beside this, idling is not allowed in most countries.

Regarding other alternators you should look at the truck manufacturers first, because with todays electronics it may not be possible to fit other alternators, at least not if they feed the same battery.

R. INVERTER

Here you to know the power and what features you need. If you install a lot of electronic anyway, you may look into complete electrical systems from one supplier, like Victron, Mastervolt and others.


Regarding further discussion of CBE, I cannot deliver much input, because I find this concept not very attractive to me. Sorry.
 

egn

Adventurer
.
In your experience traveling on ferries with your MAN KAT in Western Europe, Eastern Europe, Russia, Turkey, etc., does a motorcycle sitting high on a tail-gate lift in the back count as included in overall vehicle length? Put another way, would the UniCat EX70HD2M-MANTGA6x6 pictured above have to pay quite a bit more on a ferry, because its overall length including the motorcycle lift is greater than 10 m? Or would most ferries count only the length of its cab + camper box, which is less than 10 m, i.e. approx. 9.6 m?


The ferry operators use the full length.

There's also a second, more subtle, "bureaucratic" sort of question. You wrote earlier that in Germany motorhomes fall under a special classification, different from trucks and buses. And that the maximum motorhome length allowed in Germany is 12 m. Does this 12 m length-limit in Germany also include "stuff" on the back, i.e. stuff like the motorcycle lift on the UniCat EX70HD2M-MANTGA6x6 pictured above? If this UniCat's cab + camper box were 12 m, and the motorcycle lift in back added another 1.5 m to its length, would it be illegal?

Load at the back can be up to 1.50 m long additionally to the 12 m vehicle length.
 

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