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I completed this project yesterday.

We needed extra gas for a upcoming Alaska road trip. Mite as well build a small storage box also. This is what I came up with.

Since I try to repurpose material I used a storage box that I had made for me in the Philippines. The box was made on Clark air base in 1968 to ship my belongings statewide. I had the box exterior coated with Line-x. Used 1/8" aluminum diamond plate attached with rivets to the bumper them riveted the box to the diamond plate and screws from the inside of the motorhome to a wood frame on the box. It only weights 17# plus the gas cans. Gas cans are 2 1/2 gallon each for another 35# more or less. Box measures 36" w x 20" T and 12" deep at the bottom.

That should give us an extra 65 miles of driving before refueling.

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Yea the AF sheet metal guys are good guys to know.

My story was I had a friend in the US who was building a 35" sailboat, so he asked to get some rails and a ships wheel made out of teak. Got it done and had the shop make shipping boxes. So they whipped up some crates and I shipped the stuff back to the states.

Later I found out the crates were teak and the boat builder friend sold the empty boxes for more than the railings and wheel cost him :greedy:

Cool storage box too.

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post-1172-0-81353100-1429306081_thumb.jpI'm not sure. Have been thinking of bungee cords but the cans are susceptible to theft then. I do need to have downward force on the cans so they wont bounce. Any ideas.

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attachicon.gifIMG_0002.JPGI'm not sure. Have been thinking of bungee cords but the cans are susceptible to theft then. I do need to have downward force on the cans so they wont bounce. Any ideas.

Use a bike chain or just chain and lock for security and still use the bungees to keep them tight.

Linda S

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the spouts should be secure or someone can siphon the gas out. Keeping honest people honest. Thieves can get in regardless!

I like your storage box.

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Thanks for all the input and compliments. I will make two bungee cords to length for each side and bicycle cord locks.

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I don't have a photo right now, but I bought a Smitty-built jerry can holder for mine, and it bolted right to the rear tray my camper already had. It just has a metal "strap" that goes over the top, with a place for a padlock. If someone wanted to get it, they still could, easily. I actually don't even use a lock anymore.

It depends on where you travel. I've never had a problem with theft or siphoning. My jerry can is definitely worth more than the gas inside it. If I were to travel in more city-like areas, I'd figure out something else. But I like avoiding those kinds of places :)

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