It is well-known that for a finite group $G$ and field $k$ of characteristic 0, the linearization morphism $B(G) \to R_k(G)$ has in most cases nontrivial kernel, and this can be used to find permutation modules which admit non-isomorphic permutation bases (as $G$-sets). I'm hoping to find a relatively easy-to-state example, but this time, for a permutation $\mathbb{Z} G$-module instead.
Unfortunately, all the examples I've cooked up over $\mathbb{Q}$ haven't extended to $\mathbb{Z}$. Given that Krull-Schmidt doesn't hold for $\mathbb{Z}G$ in general, I'm almost certain that examples of such permutation modules exist - does anyone have any examples of this phenomenon?