Has anyone ever used a Grumman Olsen step van for electrical work. Lots of room, meant to haul a lot of weight, and can be found pretty inexpensive.
Any thoughts?
Step vans were equipped with different chassis capacities. Some were configured to haul newspapers; others were configured to haul bread. (if you see a twenty-footer with a four-wheel, 3/4-ton chassis, it wasn't a newspaper truck!)... A step van is great if you don't need to put to may miles on it or you need to haul heavy loads. ... If you don't need it then you are wasting money on fuel.
Just a 40 mile round trip in a huge box van is going to burn up $10 in gas. The same in a Connect, $4. $6, big deal right? Except it is also going to take you less time to park the smaller vehicle, and to get your materials and tools off of it. Your insurance is cheaper. You're not half beat to death by a horrible ride quality when you arrive at the job site, so you can get the job done faster. Doesn't take as long to warm up, so you will get to the job site faster. When it needs new brakes or tires, or breaks down, it will have cheaper repair bills and less downtime than a more commercial type vehicle.
That $6 per trip has now tripled or more when all overhead is taken into account.
Has anyone ever used a Grumman Olsen step van for electrical work. Lots of room, meant to haul a lot of weight, and can be found pretty inexpensive.
The one I used to have was long enough inside that the ladders went inside, so I never really worried about people stealing them... was terrible on fuel but could carry quite a bit inside the thing...View attachment 21689
As stated above. Standing up right would be a big benefit. Getting a ladder off the top would not be fun.
No state requires your steering wheel to be on the left side, but life is harder at fast food places and banks and tolls... if you don’t use those places, go for it... just like driving a British car in Europe...We'd like to get a couple of mail man trucks, four wheel drive. Who makes them? Would need the wheel on the correct side, though.
The one I used to have was long enough inside that the ladders went inside, so I never really worried about people stealing them.
Stay away from fast food, (always good advice) and drive through the bank lane the other direction.No state requires your steering wheel to be on the left side, but life is harder at fast food places and banks and tollbooths ...
There's sometimes room to stow ladders on the ceiling and still walk around inside.The one I used to have was long enough inside that the ladders went inside ...