Re: Teardrop Camper -- Structural Thoughts
I like good stout frames on trailers. I would think a welded aluminum box tubing or channel structure with the lighweight body attached to the top would be best. You want really decent support under you, good solid connection between the suspension and the tongue and the heavy frame will help immensely with keeping the body square and preventing it from flexing. You gotta have something solid to attach the suspension to.
Huge elementary mistake.
Use a frame, like virtually all trailer builders do.
This is exactly why I'm posting the questions. I appreciate the input, but I'm hoping I can learn more specifics about what pieces would be no longer essential or beneficial in the move from plywood (which has its own set of strengths and weaknesses) to a material like aluminum composite products.
Again, I'm untrained. But a wooden frame doesn't seem to have much strength on its own. The one in this picture could be pushed over pretty easily. Wood flexes and has limited strength to hold onto fasteners. It makes great sense when you're then adding thin wood panels, since the frame pieces strengthen the edges of the panels. But with ACP, I can make an adhesive bond along the full length of the joined panels that doesn't seem like it would be weak in a way a similar joint would be with plywood.
There are very few examples of structural failures with teardrops online. Rotten wood is the one easy thing to find, but that's not the issue here.
I can strengthen the wall-to-roof seam with square tubing and I can strengthen the wall-to-floor seam with square tubing. But does one of those offer more benefit than the other? I know angle-stock is less resistance to shear than square tubing, but with the wrap-around-and-down front wall (from the roof) providing lateral strength, combines with shear-type walls fore and aft, would square tubing at the seams be doing any appreciable amount of work?
I wouldn't be surprised if they are. But I wish there were a way to find out with more certainty so I can avoid unnecessary pieces in this thing.
Consider using aluminum honeycomb, especially for the floor. It's cheaper than you think if you have a local company. Also consider 3m vhb foam for adhesive. Can accommodate lots of misalignments and vibrations.
Thanks. I'm looking around. Finding 5x10 sheets of any of these composite/laminate/structured materials is the trick. I've got sources now for aluminum composite panels and corrugated plastic. But I'm also looking into other options.
And I've already done a bunch of testing with about a dozen different adhesives, including (for structural bonds) the 3M VHB tapes, Dow 995, and 3M ScotchWeld structural epoxy adhesives. I think flexibility is important, considering the vibration the thing will be subject to.
As I continue with this project, I hope to learn enough about Sketchup to be able to post illustrations of what I'm planning in order to get feedback from people who have a better understanding of how this works. I don't mind overbuilding, in and of itself, but I'd rather be able to find the stuff that offers no benefit up front.