โSep-04-2019 05:31 PM
โMay-30-2024 12:06 AM - edited โMay-30-2024 12:14 AM
I have built one out of pure necessity. Most of the materials i had tucked away or given to me. The biggest important factor in the entire build was to keep the camper weight itself to a minimum. I framed the exterior walls with 1 1/2" x 1 1/2" x 3' soild styrene deck spindles each extended on each end with hollow vinyl spindles of the same dimension giving me roughly 8' high walls. Each stud (connected spindles) were placed 4' to 4' to 2'= 10' length and for the width i settled on 70" just because that was the length of other material i had. I know you may think 4' centers are to far apart however if you use 16" tie down straps and hurricane clips at each joint and use strictly screws only the frame will stand and once you sheet the walls the frame will be solid. Stagger sheets of 1/4" plywood adds to stability. Once done sheeting wrap entire structure in as thick of plastic as you can, painters drop cloth type plastic works great. Wrap 2 times completely paying attention to not staple in the field rather stay to the edges and lap all over under. Lastly get two 15'x20' tarps (I used camouflage ones from harbor freight at $20 a piece. I used corrugated metal roofing to do the roof but i didn't sheet it with any wood, just the metal. Now you'll have a basic rigid box to do any custom build you want and have almost no substantial weight to tend with. Kdotmatrix I have video and images of my home build if anyone wants to see email me kdotscomc@gmail.com
โSep-10-2019 06:59 AM
APT wrote:
Factory built RV uses far lighter construction materials.
โSep-10-2019 06:39 AM
โSep-10-2019 03:35 AM
rjstractor wrote:
For a builder that wanted to build it literally from the frame up, a flatbed equipment hauler has the frame strength you need, especially the 10K+ GVWR ones.
โSep-10-2019 03:35 AM
rjstractor wrote:
For a builder that wanted to build it literally from the frame up, a flatbed equipment hauler has the frame strength you need, especially the 10K+ GVWR ones.
โSep-09-2019 12:19 PM
โSep-09-2019 08:05 AM
โSep-06-2019 09:45 AM
โSep-06-2019 05:34 AM
โSep-06-2019 04:20 AM
Gdetrailer wrote:
Your sarcasm has been noted..
Actually, YES, I HAVE "paid attention" to the frames of TTs. In fact I have studied a lot of trailer frame designs because my plan for my second TT WAS to build from scratch frame up..
What YOU did was wrong to start with, NEVER unbolt the "house" until you are ready to "scoop" it off the frame. The "house" by design ACTS as one huge truss and adds considerable amount of strength to the steel frame.
YOU should have cut the bolts at the dump, THEN push or better yet LIFT the house off the frame (pushing off can twist or tweak the now weakened frame).
Those cheap landscape trailers WILL make a horrible base for any "RV" unless you REWORK the frame CONSIDERABLY which WILL require a lot of heavier steel.. New steel prices are insane..
Now IF the OP is considering a heavy duty flatbed trailer with real I beams and has 2" deck boards then that IS a different critter than the cheap landscape trailers..
I also have a 18' heavy duty 10K GVWR flat bed trailer which CAN and is able to haul a full sized pickup truck up to 7500 lbs.. It IS a beast, weighing in at 2,400 lbs EMPTY.
Compare that to a cheap landscape trailer which might weigh in at 700-800 lbs..
Yeah, my 18ft trailer did cost me $3500 vs a cheap landscape trailer at $1000 but I can assure you a 7500 lb truck would simply squash the cheap landscape trailer..
Just trying to steer the OP away from a potential money pit mistake that they WILL regret down the road.
Don't ignore the foundation, going cheap on that will result in reworking and reworking and reworking..
But, hey carry on folks, MR "Scooby" your shot of sarcasm reminds me of why I rarely post on this forum any more..
โSep-05-2019 05:53 PM
JRscooby wrote:Gdetrailer wrote:
"Landscape" trailer like this?
Yeah, forget about it.
Take a good hard look at the steel rail above the deck..
THAT is your "frame"..
If you cut it or remove it the entire trailer will sag over time.
Those trailers are built way to skimpy to build a RV on unless you want to spend a considerable amount of time and money revamping it with much heavier steel framing.
Have you ever paid much attention to the frame of a TT? We had a old one, wanted to build something on the frame. Pulled the appliances out, cut the bolts, and strapped the house to frame to haul to the dump. Thought we could just hoe the house off the frame, and take it back to shop. (We did that) When unstrapping we discovered the weight of house, without the stiffness of house bolted to frame was more than frame could handle.
We built the trailer we wanted, but only used the axles, suspension, and coupler...
โSep-05-2019 04:26 PM
โSep-05-2019 02:39 PM
Gdetrailer wrote:
"Landscape" trailer like this?
Yeah, forget about it.
Take a good hard look at the steel rail above the deck..
THAT is your "frame"..
If you cut it or remove it the entire trailer will sag over time.
Those trailers are built way to skimpy to build a RV on unless you want to spend a considerable amount of time and money revamping it with much heavier steel framing.
โSep-05-2019 01:46 PM
the bear II wrote:
I believe cost wise it may be better to find a good used travel trailer and then remodel it to fit your needs. The travel trailer would already be insulated and wired plus have water and holding tanks located to properly balance the weight. I've seen where folks have removed all of the old cabinetry and then designed the interior and built cabinets, beds and seating to meet their desires. Load balance is important as well as load capacity.
Just my thought based on posts I've read over the years and youtube videos I've seen from folks who have done both.