Guess it's important to reiterate that some of us sought out an older 2-stroke bus because we wanted an older bus. Style wise, the older fleets had much more going for them than the newer smooth-sided squared off designs in my opinion.
Back to the Super C side of this, there are lots of vintage trucks which would be great candidates for conversion into a motor home, and one real advantage to using a vintage truck as a starting point is the ease of swapping drivetrain and suspension components when compared to working with a vintage bus.
Richard. your MGB resto wasn't a "frame off" because the MGB is unibody. Do you participate on the MGE or BritishV8 forums?Probably right about the Mayflower conversion. Getting that through a campsite would be a challenge. Might need a scout car.Jim
A 6V92 overhaul kit is $2000. https://www.ebay.com/itm/220423672040?hash=item33524650e8:g:LJgAAOSwszZa2f1f And the other side of the coin is that no modern diesel engine is inexpensive to rebuild. A Cummins ISB is probably the cheapest. You can't even get parts for Ford 6.0 and 6.4s anymore. A Ford 6.7 is worn out in 250,000 miles if you are working it and they are very expensive (for a pickup truck) to rebuild - $15K and up.I stand by my statement that the best RV conversion platform is a modern coach with a Series 60.
Cough. No offense,just a small fact check. My company runs countless 6.7 powerstrokes. The entire range, 2011 to 2021. I drive a 2012, but that’s besides the point. The 11/12 engines had occasional valve problems, we had a 11 break a chunk of valve of 2 months ago, fresh engine being installed for 9 grand. This is a 350k truck. To get 15 k would have to be brand new everything. Turbo, long block, fuel system etc. pray tell what happens at 250k because we have a lot of trucks just crossing that mark or already crossed in the past few years