Wednesday 17 July 2013

Polmanter. The Perfect Site?

This is the 2nd year in a row we have been here, and as a site it really hard to fault. The pitches range from generous to enormous most separated by hedges or in pairs if you are not alone .  As I said before we have a shaded grassed area next to our hardstanding and the pitch opposite occupied by a T5 is even bigger.

What is more nobody tells you how to pitch, front in, back in, sideways or at angle and certainly not within 6inches of some poxy pitch marker it is entirely up to you.
In addition the whole place is immaculate. The loos are cleaned at sensible times, there is spotless pool a bar / restaurant with decent ale and reasonable shop.
There is also a minibus service into St ives which runs until late so meals in town are possible.

So Okay wild camping this aint and it don't come cheap at £38 a night for 3 of us plus dog but you know what i think its worth it for our main holiday.
We have been touring for 25 years and I dont think we have stayed anywhere better, it has the feel of a top class continental site.
lets also not forget the sun has not stopped shining since we arrived. 
Always helps!

Sunday 14 July 2013

Mr Happy does Cornwall

The next destination for Mr Happy and le puck is our main 2 week holiday to Cornwall. We had an early start on what was forecast to be one of the hottest days of the year.  First stop was only on the M42 to stock up on caffeine and to try and shut Milo the dog up
After we chugged steadily on stocking up on cheap petrol at Cribs Causeway before the stretch of the M5 that seems to go on forever.
All went pretty  well although the hills on the A30 around Okehampton were a bit of a struggle. We arrived after 140 miles and nearly 6 hours with a very numb bum at Polmanter in St Ives got everthing set up and collapsed in glorious sunshine


Saturday 6 July 2013

Pop Top Canvas Replacement Part 2

This should really be entitled beware all who enter here.
The new canvas arrived and I duly started to glue it to the refurbished ring using Evostick. About halfway round it dawned on me this canvas is too small...Argh!
As illustrated below

Several e mail exchanges were then had with the ever helpful Matt and we came to the conclusion that, I had the later (larger) roof but with the earlier internal hinges front and back rather than the external cantilever hinges on either side and the canvas was fitted again by the earlier method of self tappers rather than the later method (whatever that is). Which Matt had not seen before.
This only underlined that I had a crossover model and Eriba at that time kind of built their vans with whatever parts they had!.
So Matt agreed to take the small canvas back and replace it with a hybrid one to fit my spec, this he did in double quick time and I cannot again fault the service or quality so one more plug:
www.matts-soft-tops.co.uk
So with right canvas delivered the gluing restarted, following the pencil line, as the instructions said the holes in the ring were located using a bradawl

One top tip here is to make sure you keep the canvas stretched as you work your way round otherwise it wont fit!!
Fortunately if you get a move on the glue can be unpealed and restuck.
45 minutes later and we were fitted.

Now the next stage involves a good screw (sorry couldn't resist that!) The screws you need are no. 6 stainless steel 3/4 inch raised head countersunk self tappers.
These match the originals and give enough play to allow for the fact that not 1 hole is drilled vertically.
You cannot get them at places like B & Q so you need a specialist shop or on line. I got mine from
www. pts-uk.com.
 I had to buy a packet of a 100 but at less than £8 delivered I couldn't complain.
I found it easier to assemble the roof upside down on a table
2nd top tip is to align the various holes using in my case an old darning needle, a long thin nail would work as well

Ok screwing upside down is not easy (sorry!) but once you have aligned a couple on each side then the rest go in easy enough.
At this stage they do not have to be fully tightened. I the turned the whole assembly the right way up and took the screws out one
at a time and put a dob of exterior silicon sealant into the hole before screwing down tight.
So then behold the roof is finished!
           
The sprung wire was then fed though the provided slot at the front of the canvas and the joint then worked round to the side. This was a surprising painless process.

Fitting back on the puck was fairly straight forward although it does need two people and an element of supporting the roof on you head as you try and push the sprung wire over the lip, plastic bike tyre levers do help this process.
I would also add that I replaced the rotten linen strip that covered the roof fixing staples with 24mm duck tape before refitting the top.
So the final result
I have to say I am really impressed by the quality and fit.
So as a final reminder if you are going to do this do not assume you have a standard model Puck especially if it was built in the mid '70's!!