Arrh yes, and the only true plane to take any sort of measurement and square from is between the window frames side to side. Try to use any other plane to take a square measure from and every wall or cupboard will be at a different angle, that one really sends you crazy when you try to get benches and cupboards to line up off an installed wall to run along the existing bus wall... that will make some sort of sense when you start the fit out.supersparky wrote:Hi Mark and Betty, welcome to the forum. Coasters make a great M/home. Just remember that the only straight lines on one are from front to back. Every vertical surface on a Coaster has a curve in it. Look at as many different layouts as you can, before you get too far into your fit-out.
Ask any question you like. As T1 said earlier, you might even get the answer that you need.
The other trick is only mount cupboards etc to one plane, usually the walls rather than the floor, if you want the security of also mounting to the floor then use piano hinge pieces as the attaching bits, otherwise when the body twists to go over things like a service station driveway the twisting will start to tear things apart and cupboard door will either self open or not open unless you can duplicate the body twist when they were installed. Doors are ok as you can mount them as an over lap of the cupboard frame but drawers are a whole different matter The usual way many commercial installers get around that problem is to make the cupboard a free standing unit, then it is spaced out from the wall and some sort of fill in around the edges to cover the gap. The problem with that is the loss of room inside and worst is the added weight. The vehicle wall is plenty strong enough to hang a cupboard from and also be the back wall.... something to think about during the build, weight is the enemy or all fit-outs
T1 Terry