Grit dog wrote:
JRscooby wrote:
Anybody remember the plywood Xs we used under water beds? Cut 1 sheet of 3/4 into 2 X 4 pieces, then notch in center of each. Another sheet on top, and maybe 3rd on the on the floor, would hold up couple feet above floor. If setting on pavement or even leveled gravel, the sheet on bottom would not need to by as thick, just hold the edge of other sheets out of water.
And for somebody that wanted to unload and use camper in a site, could double the sheet on ground. Could be carried under camper, raise it 3 inches.
3 sheets of 3/4 ply to gain 1-1/2" over the plywood X method? Lol
PS 3/4" x 3 = 2-1/4", not 3"
But on a practical note, when I first bought a TC, I thought that was a nifty idea. (The X, not the extra 130lbs of 2 more sheets of plywood on top of that)
And then I quickly found out that I just cut up a good sheet of plywood and made it useless. As the X ONLY works if the ground it's unloaded on is level, firm and flat.
3 sheets. 1)cut to form X. 2)Laying on top. 3)Lay on
floor But the 1 on
floor does not need to be thick. Or even used at all. If unloading on ground, or gravel, need to spread the load. In fact, doubled, the camper weight could be supported on pretty soft dirt. (BTW, I think that brings the total sheet count to 4)
Now, if a double stack of pallets, with less surface area, will hold it up, how do you level that? Plank on blocks? I think that would be about 4.5 square feet, instead of 32 square feet.