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Thread: car cabin for travelling
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17th December 2017, 09:07 AM #1Senior Member
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car cabin for travelling
Dumb question #3,152,987, what little fixtures etc do you folk fit into the cabin when travelling, eg i brought a rear seat organizer like this https://www.ebay.com.au/itm/Car-Back...AAAOxyXDhSfNkN
There seems to heaps of gear to pick from, there is nothing worse than trying to find something in the car as you are driving along, the glove box only holds so much, i have a bad habit of having 3 different shaded sunglasses for obvious reasons.
SWMBO doesn't wear sunnies, unless its super bright (her eyes aren't well - wonder why), how many times have you looked for something only to find its rolled under one of the front seat and gotten jammed
I'm sure the seasoned travelers will have plenty of good idea's etc.
Regards
Stevo
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17th December 2017 09:07 AM # ADSGoogle Adsense Advertisement
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17th December 2017, 02:36 PM #2
My travel kit always includes portable coffee: Supply of water, instant coffee, sugar, dry "creamer," and an immersion heater that plugs into the cigarette lighter socket.
Cheers,
JoeOf course truth is stranger than fiction.
Fiction has to make sense. - Mark Twain
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17th December 2017, 03:24 PM #3
Thats 1 step away from taking your coffee intravenously ......
The person who never made a mistake never made anything
Cheers
Ray
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17th December 2017, 04:05 PM #4
my tip is to minimise the amount of crap you are carrying.
Essentials would be:
wallet and licence
mobile phone
box of tissues
sunnies -- in your case one pair on your nose, plus 2 spares.
map
water or coffee in a travel mug
limited quantity of munchies.
and that's about it. So why do you need an organiser?regards from Alberta, Canada
ian
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17th December 2017, 06:55 PM #5
For traveling not commuting... It all goes on the back seat. Large format map, snacks, hats, windscreen sunshade, side window sunscreens, carry bag for that dash into the supermarket to restock the munchies, larger container of water to refill the small bottles up front, coats/jumpers as required depending on climate, umbrella, tech bag with cables/chargers/laptop/tablet..., thankfully CD's have been replaced with a usb stick, rubbish bag, suncreen, hand cream, .....
Franklin
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19th December 2017, 02:41 PM #6Senior Member
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Well members thanks for good ideas, I suppose i was reflecting back when the kids were young, and the amount of gear one had to take on a trip was staggering.
But now there are only 3.
2 humans and the dawg.
Something I didn't think of was side window shades, (cheers fuzzie) especially for Bell - dawg not wifey.
Regards
Stevo
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20th December 2017, 11:49 PM #7GOLD MEMBER
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The storage of gear would depend on several things, whether it was a short trip, an extended trip or a long trip. The length of trip would depend on what you carry, a short trip you'd carry the items mentioned above, plus camera etc. An extended trip would include all the previous plus a tool kit for emergency repairs and parts, radiator hose set, fan belts etc. Do you require the back seat in for the Grand Kids?????
Depending how often you plan on "tripping" and the vehicle you're using. To make storage and finding stuff easier, and a spot for Bell to sit lay down etc, I'd look at making a drawer system that was accessible from both sides through the rear passengers doors. with possibly a secret compartment/drawer in the centre for the spare parts (if required) or valuables cameras etc.
I used to design and make units similar to this, so if you'd like some ideas/sketches, let me know and I'll knock up a few ideas for you.
KrynTo grow old is mandatory, growing up is optional.
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21st December 2017, 03:47 AM #8
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21st December 2017, 12:04 PM #9
What sort of "car" are we talking about? A conventional four door passenger car/wagon, something like a Landcruiser, or maybe a twin cab ute.
When I had my 100 series "cruiser we would remove the 2nd. row seats and fit a board with tie down points so we could carry storage boxes safely in the cabin. The 2rd. row seats had been permanently removed and a fridge slide and sliding drawer were situated there.To grow old is inevitable.... To grow up is optional
Confidence, the feeling you have before you fully understand the situation.
What could possibly go wrong.
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21st December 2017, 09:26 PM #10
In all our road travels now we always travel with one thought in mind of leaving maps travel mugs etc out of sight in the cabin of the car & now in the boot/trunk of the car on exiting after having a portable GPS unit stolen from a hire car some years age in Sydney.
Having been stung once with insurance costs with the hire car etc ,we are ever mindful of not advertising the fact that we're touring.
We usually travel with all the accoutrements like rugs, picnic necessaries nibbles to make the journey pleasant but make it mindful even for short stops to tidy up before leaving the car now.
Insurance hurts as an added burden to your travels if caught unawares.
My 0.2c input.Johnno
Everyone has a photographic memory, some just don't have film.
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21st December 2017, 11:54 PM #11GOLD MEMBER
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To grow old is mandatory, growing up is optional.
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22nd December 2017, 08:51 AM #12Senior Member
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Whoops, i should have said its a dual cab, good point about keeping gear out of sight.
Kryn - thanks for the offer on the sketches ideas etc, i got a set of tritan draws, but haven;t fitted them yet, as I was unsure about how much room I needed in the back, I have intentions of bring back some timber from Q/land.
Just have to get around the "anti-timber minister".
Thanks for the extra input.
Regards
Stevo
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22nd December 2017, 09:32 PM #13
A lot of touristy sites at picnic areas or site seeing areas of course advise not only locking your vehicle (pretty standard these days) but also to keep valuable items out of sight in the main cabin.
A lot of folk are ever keen to get out of their vehicle ready to explore the area but in their haste they overlook one important thing besides locking up & that is make their whole vehicle secure,seen it many times in our travels around here & overseas.Just look in the cars ect next time you're touring it's amazing how blasé people get about their own security.Johnno
Everyone has a photographic memory, some just don't have film.
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22nd December 2017, 10:14 PM #14
I take a plastic card and abuse it like hell.
Road trips a junk food heaven.
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