โNov-13-2017 04:17 AM
โNov-15-2017 09:24 AM
โNov-15-2017 09:15 AM
That's good to know! I had read some comment about stall mats being overly heavy? But it sounds like the thickness is part of the appeal.
โNov-15-2017 07:35 AM
2004.5 Ram SLT LB 3500 DRW Quad Cab 4x4
1988 Bigfoot (C11.5) TC (1900# w/standard equip. per decal), 130 watts solar, 100 AH AGM, Polar Cub A/C, EU2000i Honda
Toad: 91 Zuke
โNov-15-2017 04:30 AM
ab257 wrote:
I bought some rolls of adhesive stair tread non slip material and ran it around the bottom perimeter of the basement. That stopped almost all of the bed movement.
Reddog1 wrote:
have tried several different friction mats, from 1/8" to 1/4". They offered some resistance to sliding, but nothing compared to the stall mats. The surface was slicker (smoother), and being thin they had no cush to allow the TC bottom to imbed in as well wrap into the ribs of the truck bed. They are too rigid to completely form to the truck bed ribs and closings off the drainage.
mountainkowboy wrote:
It was just painted from the factory. I built a platform that I attached to the bottom to add structural strength to the floor so it could be used off truck like the newer T/C's. I attached it with 5 straps like the one in the side view pic. The sides and bottom I sprayed with rubberized undercoating to seal it and prevent water intrusion. I ended up rebuilding most of that T/C and modified it to suit our needs, there's a thread here documenting it somewhere. Wish I kept it.
โNov-14-2017 04:53 PM
2004.5 Ram SLT LB 3500 DRW Quad Cab 4x4
1988 Bigfoot (C11.5) TC (1900# w/standard equip. per decal), 130 watts solar, 100 AH AGM, Polar Cub A/C, EU2000i Honda
Toad: 91 Zuke
โNov-14-2017 12:37 PM
roamlab wrote:mountainkowboy wrote:
My 1990 S&S had a basement made of 3/4 plywood and was only designed to be used on a truck
Interesting...Is there anything on the bottom to aid truck bed drainage?
โNov-14-2017 07:26 AM
roamlab wrote:I have tried several different friction mats, from 1/8" to 1/4". They offered some resistance to sliding, but nothing compared to the stall mats. The surface was slicker (smoother), and being thin they had no cush to allow the TC bottom to imbed in as well wrap into the ribs of the truck bed. They are too rigid to completely form to the truck bed ribs and closings off the drainage.Reddog1 wrote:
I have a Bigfoot molded fiberglas TC. I think I have used everything posted on RV.NET since 2004, and the horse stall mat has worked best for me. No guides, standard tie downs, and also with a Stable Lift. My daughter and son in law also used it with their SixPac TC on their flatbed truck, with no guides.
Thanks! I've seen mention of horse stall mats a lot while researching this. Do you have similar experience with generic friction mats?
Interesting...Is there anything on the bottom to aid truck bed drainage?
2004.5 Ram SLT LB 3500 DRW Quad Cab 4x4
1988 Bigfoot (C11.5) TC (1900# w/standard equip. per decal), 130 watts solar, 100 AH AGM, Polar Cub A/C, EU2000i Honda
Toad: 91 Zuke
โNov-14-2017 05:14 AM
โNov-14-2017 05:00 AM
โNov-14-2017 04:51 AM
ticki2 wrote:Reddog1 wrote:This is probably your best resource for replacing the floor in your Avion . The original floor was a composite of 3/8ply , 1" Styrofoam , 3/8 ply , glued together . Several on the Avion thread have replaced the floor , some as original and some with 2 layers of 3/4 ply. It's a long thread , look more towards the beginning . If you find something you need you can PM the the poster for more info and probably pictures . Good luck
There is a Avion camper rebuilds - hundreds of photos thread you may find of interest. Unfortunately many of the photo links are broken. If you read something there, you can post on the thread or send the poster a PM requesting more info or photos. This is assuming you are after information on your Avion.
Wayne
โNov-14-2017 04:23 AM
Reddog1 wrote:This is probably your best resource for replacing the floor in your Avion . The original floor was a composite of 3/8ply , 1" Styrofoam , 3/8 ply , glued together . Several on the Avion thread have replaced the floor , some as original and some with 2 layers of 3/4 ply. It's a long thread , look more towards the beginning . If you find something you need you can PM the the poster for more info and probably pictures . Good luck
There is a Avion camper rebuilds - hundreds of photos thread you may find of interest. Unfortunately many of the photo links are broken. If you read something there, you can post on the thread or send the poster a PM requesting more info or photos. This is assuming you are after information on your Avion.
Wayne
โNov-14-2017 04:18 AM
Kayteg1 wrote:
When I bought my camper I was under assumption that the floor- being main structural component is 1 1/8" plywood. That did not to turn to be truth...I have factory rubber mat on my Ford and it does good job.
Reddog1 wrote:
There is a Avion camper rebuilds - hundreds of photos thread you may find of interest.
SidecarFlip wrote:
Mine is 3/4" plywood overlayed with waterproof paint and I have 3 roll formed steel channels running parallel with the camper and one across the back screwed into the floor every 1 1/2".
work2much wrote:
I'm not sure I would go fiberglass. Is is flexible enough to handle differential loading when the camper is flexing around on jack stands? The bottom of many wood or aluminum framed campers is just a belly pan and not a structural part of the rv. They are often thin to save weight. If plywood was there before I would consider replacing in kind with high quality plywood. Apply wood sealer before install.
Reddog1 wrote:SidecarFlip wrote:I think that would be over kill. I am sure someone is going to suggest marine plywood and stainless steel screws. More over kill in my opinion. I don't have aluminum, stainless or marine plywood in my home.Reddog1 wrote:
I would just put everyday plywood or strand board, probably 3/4" thick. Paint it with a good deck paint. I would put 1-1/2" x 1/8" angle iron around the bottom edges, mounted with countersunk screws. This is just to protect the corners. I would caulk the angle iron.
Wayne..
I think I'd use aluminum angle versus iron for the rust factor and miter the corners and caulk with Dicor.
GoinThisAway wrote:
The bottom of my Bigfoot is fiberglass. I did have an issue with slippage side-to-side until I made a pair of removable plastic boards that both help me align when I load and keep it from slipping.
1mtnman wrote:
I bought an older Hallmark truck camper that I rebuilt. The plywood on the bottom was totally rotted out along with some of the super structure. I used 3/4" plywood to replace the bottom. I rolled 3 coats of Flexseal on prior to attaching the plywood to the camper. Flexseal is not cheap but it is a great product. I got mine at Lowes about $75.00 per gallon but have 1/2 can left.
Reddog1 wrote:
I have a Bigfoot molded fiberglas TC. I think I have used everything posted on RV.NET since 2004, and the horse stall mat has worked best for me. No guides, standard tie downs, and also with a Stable Lift. My daughter and son in law also used it with their SixPac TC on their flatbed truck, with no guides.
mountainkowboy wrote:
My 1990 S&S had a basement made of 3/4 plywood and was only designed to be used on a truck
โNov-13-2017 07:02 PM
โNov-13-2017 06:19 PM
2004.5 Ram SLT LB 3500 DRW Quad Cab 4x4
1988 Bigfoot (C11.5) TC (1900# w/standard equip. per decal), 130 watts solar, 100 AH AGM, Polar Cub A/C, EU2000i Honda
Toad: 91 Zuke