Wow that was a long day. But we managed to get to Denver, swap the stock top onto my buddy John's trailer, pick swap on the camper, come back home, take the camper back off and put the stock top back on in about 12 hours. Had one minor hiccup, but it went pretty smooth.
Before we got to Mom and Dad's place I had made arrangements to buy some camper jacks from a guy in Denver too. I had actually posted something about the camper on Wander The West and a guy messaged me that he had some camper jacks to sell. This illustrates how close I was to not getting this. As he had gone over to look at it and then found the jacks. Then he told his wife what he was up to and let's just say she put her foot down. So he had to back out of the deal and put the jacks up for sale. Good luck for me on two counts. He didn't buy the camper and I was able to buy a set of jacks for what it would have cost me to rent jacks twice. Bonus, the jacks were like new.
18886 by
Rob Zulian, on Flickr
Since the Blazer was sitting at my Dad's house this week, he helped while we were on the way up by crawling in the back and removing all the bolts to the top. Pretty impressive since he's 78 and still recovering from his 2nd knee surgery in a year. It was a big help since we had the top off within a few minutes.
Top off, Utah dust still inside.
IMG_20170813_112605615 by
Rob Zulian, on Flickr
Top on Trailer.
IMG_20170813_112618079 by
Rob Zulian, on Flickr
Topless.

IMG_20170813_114728557 by
Rob Zulian, on Flickr
Not bad looking top off.
IMG_20170813_122005971 by
Rob Zulian, on Flickr
The donor and transplant patient.
IMG_20170813_130235603 by
Rob Zulian, on Flickr
Pretty clean inside, but the carpet is going out, the shag on the walls is going away as well as the dingy curtains.
IMG_20170813_130447811 by
Rob Zulian, on Flickr
Plenty of room for activities!
IMG_20170813_130452836 by
Rob Zulian, on Flickr
The resident engineer checking out the donor. (aka Dad)
IMG_20170813_131141147_HDR by
Rob Zulian, on Flickr
This is where things would get interesting. We needed to figure out if the jacks had enough lifting height to get the camper high enough to reach my truck. The donor is stock all the way down to the tires. Mine is sitting on 35" tires and 4" worth of lift. It was quickly found that the camper jacks just barely reached the stock Blazer, so some technical jenga work was in order. Multiple chunks of wood to get the jacks up higher so we could get one truck out from under it and then crank it up and pull mine in under it.
IMG_20170813_133200019 by
Rob Zulian, on Flickr
Just as we started lifting and looking for any missed bolts we realized there were two still clinging on for dear life. Front two on the drivers side. At first you can't see them, that is until you take a few screws out and slide the fridge out slightly.
IMG_20170813_140710044 by
Rob Zulian, on Flickr
This is where we ran into the biggest issue of the day. The most forward bolt had it's caged nut in the body strip out. I had tried to snap it loose with my 1/4" drive matco cordless impact but it just spun. His Blazer still had the interior side panels so the only way to see the bottom side of the bolt was to remove the ashtray, but we still couldn't get anything on it to hold it. So a sawzall was brought out to take the head off. We lost the better part of an hour screwing around with one bolt.
IMG_20170813_141908767 by
Rob Zulian, on Flickr
Me goofing around taking pics while the guy gnaws away at the bolt.
IMG_20170813_142008963 by
Rob Zulian, on Flickr
It's off! We then had to remove the floor from the other blazer to set it into mine prior to dropping the camper on.
IMG_20170813_142906896 by
Rob Zulian, on Flickr
After a nerve racking few minutes of backing up, re-aligning and backing up again we finally got it lined up to lower the jacks.
IMG_20170813_150719087 by
Rob Zulian, on Flickr
Other side.
IMG_20170813_150733505 by
Rob Zulian, on Flickr
Back in Pueblo. This time at John's place. I was able to pop the top fully with both lifting panels. It's not as smooth to lift as Larry's is, since the lifting mechanisms are completely different, but it works. We will have to rebuild the front lift panels due to water damage. Top needs cleaned, but is free of rips and tears.
IMG_20170813_192341476_HDR by
Rob Zulian, on Flickr
Other side.
IMG_20170813_192354186_HDR by
Rob Zulian, on Flickr
After some organized chaos getting the camper back off again, we dropped it down closer to the ground and could see all the issues with the roof that caused the damage. Screws loose, exposed and the vent that is blasted but covered with a chunk of tarp and tape are the main issues. No tears in the roof itself though. We got the stock top back on in the dark and called it a day.
The 2hour drive down was interesting. The hole in the front of the roof was gulping in more air than any part of the windows would let out. Anything past 65 mph caused the top to develop some lift I could see in the mirrors. So we kept it at 65. This will go away when the wood is replaced. I will say it didn't feel much different to drive with the camper on.
Time to go to bed.