As we did last Wednesday we were up earlier than usual to drive to Indiana. We wanted to be at Bontrager’s Surplus when they opened at 9 AM to pick up some battery terminal covers for Butch, and possibly ourselves, so we pulled out of our driveway at 6:16 AM.
We took our usual route west on M-59 to I-96W to Lansing Road south. Rather than get on I-69S we stayed on Lansing Road all the way to Charlotte where we stopped at the Biggby’s Coffee to use the restroom and get coffee and bagels. From there we then took I-69S to Coldwater and headed west on US-12 since Bontrager’s Surplus is located on US-12 in White Pigeon, Michigan.
We arrived at Bontrager’s Surplus just after 9 AM. We looked around briefly but did not spot the battery terminal covers so we asked one of the employees where they might be and he took us directly to them. We bought 36 (18 red and 18 black), 10 of each for Butch and 8 of each for us. Bontrager’s is probably the best stocked of the surplus and salvage stores in this area and I could have spent hours here, but we had other places to be and a long day ahead of us.
Our shopping done we continued on to Coach Supply Direct in Edwardsburg, Michigan where we found Josh Leach hard at work on some interior remodeling of a Fleetwood Revolution. He removed the Notion Linen sample from his Lambright Comfort Chairs book and we chatted for a while.
I reflected on fact that one of the nicest Class A motorhomes we ever saw was a Fleetwood Revolution. The interior was a (faux) cherry wood with satin finish nickel hardware. It had modern, clean cabinetry and light grey wall treatments and a light tile floor with nickel colored inserts, as best I can recall. We eventually toured the American Coach factory in Decatur, Indiana where the Revolution was made and after seeing some of the construction methods we were less enamored with it. Like all of the American Coach products it was out of our price range as a new unit but it was very much to our taste.
Before continuing our Journey Linda pulled up Jarel’s address in our GPS. I then texted Jarel to give him a revised, and more accurate ETA. We headed southwest out of Edwardsburg on M-62 which becomes IN-23 through Granger. We turned onto IN-331 which bypasses most of Mishawaka east of town and delivered us to US-20 where we headed west. We stopped at the Meijer’s, which has a filling station, fueled the car, and switched drivers. We exited US-20 just south of South Bend, Indiana and headed south on US-31. We exited US-31 at Rochester and took IN-25 south to Logansport. I texted Jarel an updated ETA enroute.
We arrived at Jarel Beatty Cabinetry at 11:45 AM and pulled around back. I texted Jarel to let him know we were there and he came out of the shop to meet us. We chatted for a while, loaded up the pantry, the slides, the three pieces for the built-in sofa that we forgot last week, a piece of walnut trim for the pantry face, and a leftover piece of 1/4″ Baltic birch plywood. Linda wrote a check for the balance we owed. The only thing left for Jarel to build is the HVAC/wiring chase cover but he cannot do that until I give him the length, which I cannot do him until the desk is installed in the bus.
We left the cabinet shop at 1 PM and stopped at the Martin’s supermarket in Logansport for lunch. This particular Martin’s did not have a salad bar but they did have pre-made salads. We each had one along with a bread roll. I called Butch to let them know we were on our way, and headed for Twelve Mile, Indiana.
I gave Butch the battery terminal covers. He and I figured their cost ($1.25 each) covered the cost of the 12 fiberglass pole mast sections ($2.00 each) we took last week and called it even.
I brought the small window frame stop block from our bus to see if Butch could make one. He had some aluminum bar stock that looked like it would work. We decided to make it longer than the original to accommodate three machine screws and cut it to size using a band saw. Butch then marked three points to drill holes using the old block as a template. Two holes were drilled through and one end hike was blind. The blind hole will fit over the shaft of the old screw that would not come out in case any of it is still protruding above the surface. The middle hole will line up with other existing hole and I will have to drill and tap a hole in the frame to match the third hole. But first I need to get some brown spray paint, put some sacrificial screws in the holes, and paint the piece.
While we were working on the stop block I noticed that Butch had a torque multiplier sitting out. He commented that it was available to a good home for a good price; hint, hint. These torque multipliers are used to break the lug nuts loose on bus and truck wheels and I have had one on my mental wish list since I first became aware of them five years ago. I had not pursued getting one as they tend to be expensive even used on Ebay. Butch wanted $75 for it so I wrote a check and put it in the car. It has three different lug nut sockets so I hope one of them first the ones on our bus. I also hoped they would fit the very large torque wrench I bought from Butch last fall but they are 1″ square drive sockets and the torque wrench has a 3/4″ square stud. I’m not sure I have a correct socket for the torque wrench so that’s another thing I still need to get.
Butch and Fonda bought a compact stacked clothes washer/dryer for their bus and asked if we would help them get it into their rig. Of course we said yes. We got it on a dolly and wheeled it out to the entrance door and then pondered the situation. We have some recent experience getting things out of and into a bus entrance door and this did not look promising. Butch handed me a tape measure and I determined that the maximum width that would fit through the step well was 23.5 inches due to the door hinges. The washer/dryer is 24″ wide and 28″ deep with a recessed back on the washer (lower unit). It is also tall, being a stacked unit, and we all agreed that the only way it was going in was on its back, through a window, using a forklift. It was Deja vu all over again; been there, done that, didn’t even get a T-shirt. That approach required more preparation than Butch cared to tackle today, and more time than we had to spare, so we moved the unit back under the overhang and left it covered with a blanket.
We all went back in the house and visited for a while longer. Butch had found his 4″ pneumatic body sander and loaned it to me along with three boxes of AA50 sanding discs. While not quite as aggressive as the #36 ceramic grit belts I have been using on the 4″ portable belt sander, this tool will allow me to get under the cabinet toe kicks where the belt sander won’t reach.
As much as we would have liked to stay and go out to dinner again, we did not want to be getting home at midnight. We wished them a safe journey, again, but this time it really is unlikely that we will see them again before they leave for Arizona. We left for home at 4:45 PM with Linda at the wheel. From SR-16W (CR-700N) we took CR-700 (Meridian) north to its northernmost point and headed west into Fulton on W750S where we picked up IN-25 and headed north. At Rochester we left IN-25 and took US-31N to US-20W. We exited US-20 at SR-19 and drove north through Elkhart, finally arriving at the Martin’s supermarket at CR-4 around 6:15 PM. This Martin’s has an excellent salad bar and a nice dining area with an upstairs, which is where we chose to sit and eat our dinner.
Linda continued to drive after dinner. There is an entrance to the Indiana Toll Road (I-80/90) on SR-19 just south of CR-4 so we got on going east. The toll road is a few extra miles compared to US-12 through Michigan, but it is posted 70 MPH (max) with no stops, compared to 55 MPH with six towns that have reduced speed limits and stops.
We exited the toll road, paid our $2.90 toll, and headed north on I-69. A few miles later we were back in Michigan. We left the Interstate at M-60 (exit 25) to refuel at the Shell station, use the restrooms, and switch drivers. It was about 8 PM and still light, but it was cloudy to the west and the light was fading. I find night driving easier than Linda does and I had been able rest while she drove so I was good to go.
I followed our usual route, leaving I-69N and using the Lansing Road cutoff to get to I-96E. We passed mile marker 100 on the south side of Lansing, which meant we had 33 miles to the M-59 exit. From there it was 11 miles to Hacker Road and then the final 2.5 miles to our house.
We arrived home at 10 PM, five hours and 15 minutes after we left Twelve Mile and just over 16 hours from when we left home this morning. The trip odometer indicated 534.8 miles traveled today. We unloaded the camera, phones, wallets, etc. from the car but decided to wait until tomorrow to unload the cabinetry, tools, and parts. We headed off to bed and watched part 3 of a PBS program The Mystery of Matter: The Search for the Elements. Interesting stuff. We both find programs that inform and educate to be entertaining.