Forum Discussion

coon_creekers's avatar
May 03, 2014

alum frame vs. styrofoam?

after talking with a dealer we have learned most new manufacturers are switching to a cheaper much less durable construction, not a metal frame but rather a Styrofoam like product, in walls floor AND ROOF! how, and where, can we go to find out what manufacturers are still designing with a metal box frame? we are thinking of traveling extensively for a year, and were told with the new design, there wouldn't be much left to pull home! he did have a 2000 carri-lite with a metal frame, are there others??
  • I would throw the B.S. flag on this one. Go on the various RV manufacturer websites and see how they're built. Almost every one has a metal or wood framework and rafters...Let me guess..The brand he sells has a framework also.

    B.O.
  • coon creekers wrote:
    .........
    , and were told with the new design, there wouldn't be much left to pull home! he did have a 2000 carri-lite with a metal frame, are there others??

    I don't care how well known he is, that is typical salesman talk. I can just see trailers being towed down the road with no tops on them because they disintegrated and fell off. :Z

    Be careful of any bad claims on brands that a salesman does not carry or does not want to sell.
  • I love wood construction in good ole sticks and Tin trailers. Jayco, Puma, Zinger, Artic Fox...etc etc.

    However, the foam construction in the trailmanor is anything but cheap.

    Thanks,

    Jeremiah
  • I have a 35 year old boat ( McKee Craft that is filled with foam as is Boston Whaler and many others I'm sure that is as solid as the day it was made. 17 foot and I run a 140 HP Johnson. Must be pretty strong as it takes fiberglass about 20 years to cure for max strength. JMHO
  • this was the long time owner, not just a salesman. he had an actual cross section cutout of a display showing this new not just PRODUCT, but rather INTEGRETY of construction. said he was totally disgusted w/ new cheaper models.............and yes it was instead of a metal frame. this product is used as the basis of the frame itself, everything is just glued to it. this guy has been in this business, in same town for like ever, and I would def trust he knows what he is talking about
  • Foam panel construction is nothing new and it doesn't replace the frame. The panels are installed on the frame. It does replace the studs. That has been one of the big selling points of the Trailmanor brand.
  • Foam coring in boats is almost as old as the Flintstones,never been styrofoam though,it melts in contact with any kind of two part resin.
    not uncommon of a salesman to get it wrong,he meant (I am guessing now) one of the multitudes of structural foams used in fibreglass 'cored' boats ,very light and very very strong.
    Not cheap and easy to mess-up (no voids permitted) done right long lasting strong product.
    Done wrong?
    google 'de lam ' on any marine forum.