I have never spent so much time correcting mistakes
November 1, 2020
Early in the building process, I made a comment about respecting the craftsmanship of seasoned builders. That has never rang more true than right now.
About 10 days ago the camper was completely primed and painted. But all of the cosmetic imperfections that I thought would be covered by the paint job looked worse. I was so upset. How could this happen when I spent SO much time filling and sanding before I painted? (1) Lack of experience working with fiberglass finishes (2) hard to see problem areas with between layers of fiberglass and filler (3) garage lighting (4) wanting to reach my October 31 goal.
I thought about selling it (again). I considered just painting the whole thing black. I tried to convince myself it didn’t look that bad (it did). None of these would work for me. My only option was to find all the patience I had to sand it down, fill the areas I missed, laminate it with another thin coat of fiberglass with silicone additive, and repaint it. I was and still am heartbroken but thankful the problem was fixable.
I’ve never sanded so much in my life. I’ve spent between 30-90 minutes sanding everyday for the past 10 days. My garage is a complete mess. I bought a freaking shop vac. I am about 4 weeks behind schedule now and I definitely don’t have a camp ready camper like I thought I would. But... The shell looks amazing. So much better than before. So much smoother and stronger. Definitely worth the time. Because if I continued pouring time and energy into this project with the disappointment I had, I would've probably just trashed it.
I have a few more areas to address but I am on track to have it painted in the next few days. I am so eager to get the windows and doors installed.
A photo of the door, pop top and camper completely primed with all the imperfections glaring at me. The front could use the most attention but will be the least seen so I started my cosmetic attention the the rear and sides.
After painting, I sanded it back down to even and fill.
Close up of the shell after sanding. You can see the texture of the cardboard, which was something I didn’t expect or like. Even though it’s not completely flat at this point, all of the texture went away after going back over it with epoxy resin.
The shell was significantly smoother after another layer of epoxy resin. You can still see some of the streak and brush marks but that will be sanded down before applying the primer and paint.










