โJan-29-2018 05:44 AM
โFeb-04-2018 06:30 AM
hvac wrote:
Not sure if this comes through.
https://m.imgur.com/account/apWebWrecker/images/HYxGWAm
โFeb-04-2018 06:05 AM
gmw photos wrote:hvac wrote:
All of you need to look at how ATC does the entire frame and floor. All welded aluminum. Its expensive, but in my opinion well done.
Getting into aluminium is a whole 'nuther game indeed. Both of my horse trailers and my equipment trailer are steel, but I've pulled and used AL horse trailers. I've looked them over carefully and for sure, the engineering/design is at least "somewhat different" than steel trailers.
I have chosen steel for various reasons, but for sure it can be done well out of AL.
โFeb-02-2018 08:45 AM
JBarca wrote:Nicely done!Huntindog wrote:
John, I noticed something made out of wood attached to your frame. It appears to be able to swing down. What is that?
See here from June 2011. I still use it every campout. It has worked out well for me.
Ladder Rack Under Camper - (long lot's of pic's)
Thanks
John
โFeb-02-2018 08:29 AM
Ralph Cramden wrote:JBarca wrote:
I cannot find these thin H shapes "yet" in any hand book, but they do make them for the Manufactured Housing market. They call them MH beams or thin I beam. Here is one mill that makes them. So far that is the only mill I can find them on the web that does. I'm sure there are more, just I have not found them.
http://www.swvainc.com/housing.html
You will notice they offer a 10 x 8#/ft and a 10 x 9#/ft which I have and it has an area moment of inertia of 35.5 in.^4th.
Thanks for posting that link. Interestingly I think we have done some business with those guys in the past on something. I don't remember all of that stuff but my estimator will. I doubt you'll find any info on those MH beams in any bible, either printed or the net version. To me those are custom pieces. Maybe not so if you're a manufactured housing builder, but the website also seems to indicate they'll run those to order. I've got a fab guy I use for small stuff who used to be one of "the guys" at American Bridge. If it was made in the last 100 years and has published info he'll have it, or know where to get it lol. That's if he has not keeled over lately as he's about 85 but still going at it...I think.
On a side note reading through the company history, those WV guys may have been the inventors of the micro mini mill. Back in the day there were many here around Pittsburgh, not so much now days.
โFeb-02-2018 08:20 AM
Huntindog wrote:
John, I noticed something made out of wood attached to your frame. It appears to be able to swing down. What is that?
โFeb-02-2018 07:23 AM
โFeb-02-2018 05:58 AM
hvac wrote:
All of you need to look at how ATC does the entire frame and floor. All welded aluminum. Its expensive, but in my opinion well done.
โFeb-02-2018 05:38 AM
โFeb-02-2018 04:27 AM
Huntindog wrote:
John, I noticed something made out of wood attached to your frame. It appears to be able to swing down. What is that?
โFeb-02-2018 04:15 AM
Ralph Cramden wrote:
....snip...
It's neither here nor there, but I once had a long conversation with a broker over drinks about what Lipperts buyers look for when they go out shopping materials.....I won't go deeply into it, but will just say they apparently go looking for what others are not looking for, if you get my drift.
โFeb-02-2018 01:32 AM
JBarca wrote:
I cannot find these thin H shapes "yet" in any hand book, but they do make them for the Manufactured Housing market. They call them MH beams or thin I beam. Here is one mill that makes them. So far that is the only mill I can find them on the web that does. I'm sure there are more, just I have not found them.
http://www.swvainc.com/housing.html
You will notice they offer a 10 x 8#/ft and a 10 x 9#/ft which I have and it has an area moment of inertia of 35.5 in.^4th.
โFeb-01-2018 10:08 PM
โFeb-01-2018 04:45 PM
โFeb-01-2018 04:41 PM
Ralph Cramden wrote:
Here is why I think you're mistaken and the 10" high frame rail in your picture is a machine welded piece, and not a conventional hot rolled member. They make hot rolled H shapes (we call them a wide flange or W) or I shapes (A Jr / I, or S), only in specific readily availible sizes and weights. Going by your picture the flange width is roughly 2-1/2" wide. I determined that by comparison to the two fittings installed on the black tank. One is 1-1/2", the other 3".
There is no H or I which is hot rolled that a company like Lippert could buy from a hot mill, that would be those dimensions in a 10" height. It simply does not exist unless its a custom hot rolled shape and cost would not typically allow that.
In your picture you have a 10" height, a 2-1/2" flange width, and a 1/4" thickness both at flange and web based on the measurements you took.
Here is what you can get from a hot mill.
There are a couple dozen made with a 10" size in a wide flange, but none including the lightest which is a W10X12(lbs per ft), has a flange width smaller than 3.960 inches. Then they go up from there. The only size in a wide flange that has anywhere close to 1/4" average thickness at both flange and web is a W10X15, with a 4.00 flange width. The web is .230 and the flange is .269
There are only two readily available sizes in a Jr/I/S with a 10" height.
S10X25.4 or 10.000X4.661, The flange is 4.661 wide, and the thicknesses are flange .491 / web .311
S10X35 or 10.000X4.944, The flange is 4.944 wide, and the thicknesses are flange .491 / web .594
That's why I think your main rail is an engineered / fabricated / machine welded shape. That is unless Lippert is having hot rolled shapes custom made at great expense, or own a hot mill and making their own. Not sure why they would want to. The size is not available unless its fabricated. Maybe I'm wrong.