...A few years ago I also purchased my companies old Ford Transit van, it had a seized clutch. A few hours of working on it soon freed that up, some sheets of 8x4 plywood I laid a new floor and sidewalls (insulated with fibreglass wadding) and also the roof. Moved the twin passenger seat back and fitted a single seat in its place and it also then became a family runabout for a while, very pleased with that purchase, like you say, handy for trips to the home improvement sheds etc.
Oh dang... that reminds me of the '64 Walleye Ford van I had as a teenager; it was pumpkin orange like the one above, only none of the adverts. Now there's a vehicle that was coyote-ugly; I got into the BEST trouble with that van...
Yours is actually kinda cute... I'd totally drive that. But I'd have to paint it some actual color... I don't do white or black vehicles.
mnem
"Black cars are for people who have no imagination. White cars are just their reflection." ~ me
That photo wasn't of my van but one of the type. Mine was supposed to be when I got it, white but I hand painted that sucker in cream as it was well rusty at the time, so after much fibreglass matting had been applied where required, new chassis members welded on where required, new brake pipes and shoes, it was time to repaint it and I chose to use some coach paint ( I was working at our local bus garage at the time and had become quite an expert at hand painting so it looked like a spray job) and by the time I had given the van a couple of coats it shone better than a new van would have. I loved driving that van, like you I too had some good times in it
and because it was nearly always empty, it had excellent performance and in its time I left many unsuspecting boy racer standing at traffic lights, it was a sheer delight to see their faces drop when I left em for dead