Louisd75 wrote:I'm with Tony. My trailer is pretty curvy and it honestly wasn't a big deal. Also, looks like you're local to me. Feel free to PM if you need any suggestions on sourcing materials.
GPW wrote:And for physical reasons the rounded half tubular ‘ish structure gives it strength beyond "the Box" ...
A pop cans resistance to buckling is probably the easiest way to observe this.Ottsville wrote:GPW wrote:And for physical reasons the rounded half tubular ‘ish structure gives it strength beyond "the Box" ...
I keep seeing this statememt being made, but I don't think I understand why. Could you please explain it in simple terms to me?
I agree that it makes a better appearance.
friz wrote:A pop cans resistance to buckling is probably the easiest way to observe this.Ottsville wrote:GPW wrote:And for physical reasons the rounded half tubular ‘ish structure gives it strength beyond "the Box" ...
I keep seeing this statememt being made, but I don't think I understand why. Could you please explain it in simple terms to me?
I agree that it makes a better appearance.
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Tom&Shelly wrote:I was thinking along similar lines: Imagine how easy it is to crush an empty cereal box vs a paper towel tube.
Tom
Tom&Shelly wrote:Another explanation!: Sheets of paper, slices of pizza, and even plywood, can only bend in one direction at a time. (Must be true--I read about the pizza and paper in a math journal. And why would a mathematician lie about something like that? I'm inferring it is the same with plywood, based solely on my engineering intuition.)
Hold a slice of pizza with a slight bend in the crust and the nose doesn't flop over. Hold a piece of paper with your thumb creating a slight bend and the other end stays rigid. Put a bend in your teardrop plywood, and it will resist bending in the perpendicular direction.
Tom
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