Huntindog wrote:
Some have stated that this unit has a foam core construction of the wall AND floor. IOW, no studs. A lot of units, generally lite weight ones are going to this construction.Faster, cheaper and has good R values... Those are the good points. Fixability? not so much. I would never buy a unit with that construction.
Regardless of "foam core" construction, there ARE "ways" to get around the construction faults. Foam core by it's self is not totally at fault, it is the heart of every single RV built since the 1970s.
Foam core is a "sandwich" layer design which uses a thin wood layer on the bottom, 2" foam insulation and then a thicker wood layer for the floor. All layers are 100% glued together (IE bonded) under pressure. It is the layers and bonding that make for a strong floor system
My 1980s Komfort is indeed a "foam core" floor, I have indeed repaired it in several places and it wasn't hard or difficult to do..
The difference?
My Komfort is not a "lite" trailer and has 1/4 plywood on the underside and 1/2" plywood on the floor.
"Lite" trailers however, to achieve a lighter but much larger trailer will use 1/8" strand board underside and if lucky 1/4" strand board or MDF for the floor. THIS IS THE PROBLEM with "lite" trailers, not with foam core construction.How you fix the "lite" trailer floors is the same way you repair the non lite ones like mine. But if you want the lite trailer floor to hold up, you need to upgrade the floor thickness.
Regardless of what type of trailer the OP has, the repairs are the same, one must go in cut out any bad wood, replace with heavier material, span the weakened sections to add strength.
Is it work?
You bet, not going to lie.
Does it take time?
You bet, one would have to peel back the rind on the lemon to figure out how to repair and reinforce.
Is it going to be expensive?
Maybe, if one is able to do the work by themselves it will come down to materials only and some lost personal time. If one were to hire the job out, labor costs may make repairing less worthwhile but still cheaper than throwing the rig out and buying a new rig which will do the same thing later on.
Is it worth it?
Can be, since one would take a huge bath on resale value to unload the damaged one and then buy a new one at today's crazy prices..
I am just saying not to pronounce it dead until the OP can get a better handle on what has happened..
As mentioned, pictures may help the keyboard warriors execute on helping the OP with how to go about repairing or declaring it a terminal patient on life support.. Everything else is just a hap hazard guess.