I got this one for the asking. It was gutted inside. Single axle, 18 foot. Once I got it home, I quickly decided I was over my head for a possible rebuild inside, but thought of using the skin to make a teardrop. That's really what I wanted anyway, but showed my fiance at the time what a teardrop was and she said "I'm not going to want to sleep in one of those." So this now sits behind a buddy's corncrib, taking a beating from the weather. I could never find any info on the manufacturer. Travel-Ette out of Kansas City area. Tail lights are glass. Driver's side door behind the axle.
Not an RV per say but it hauled all our camp gear. I made the frame out of 2x2’s and the aluminum skin and sliding window from a 2nd hand metal salvage yard in Lomita Ca.. Our son was 4. He’s 55 now. The 1953 Dodge started as a fh 6 and ended up with the guts of a 60 Chrysler. 361 and torqueflite. Used the hub caps too. Could kick some butt in its day. One I should have kept.
Here's a pretty cool bookmobile by Gerstenslager. At one time, converted to living quarters inside. Currently on auction, online at bigiron dot com with a bunch of other HAMBable cars/trucks on Dec 8th. This is not mine, or anything else on the auction, just passing along info.
a motor home designed by the guy’s father in 1962 who took his family in a station wagon to Yellowstone National Park and back, then made this out of a 1962 Ford Econoline with a custom-built aircraft aluminum body. http://justacarguy.blogspot.com/2022/04/rawlings-found-out-about-abandoned.html