Pmullen503 wrote:I wonder if the people who have the money to buy a manufactured teardrop are the same people that would want one.
Are the people you see pulling handmade teardrops pulling those because they wanted to make it themselves?
That is, it's less about the object than the process of building/designing the object.
Pmullen503 wrote:That is, it's less about the object than the process of building/designing the object.
mountainminded wrote:My story is not so different from yours and if you insert “Critical Care Nurse” in place of your work history we have arrived in the same place. My metal building is finished and the lights are on and the first two production teardrops are taking shape. My goal is to build 2-4 trailers per year over the next ten years and if I can maintain that enthusiasm until my 30-trailer supply of aluminum trim runs out it will have been a worthy pursuit. Also like you, getting rich from this was never a part of the goal.
Now that I am more than a year into the project I would like to share some observations:
The Covid pandemic has made it both the best of times for producing these little trailers and the worst. Demand is unmeasurably high but the cost and availability of materials has been an enormous hurdle. My stock wheels were backordered for 6-months, windows and axles 4-months, etc., etc. And the cost of everything has more than doubled since my prototype was completed just a year ago. The Russian Baltic Birch plywood that I use for cabinets and bulkheads is now unaffordable and (I suspect) soon to be unavailable and I’m not sure there is even a suitable alternative on the horizon. Supply chain issues are real and may force a compromise of your ideals.
The successful teardrop manufacturers that you are familiar with started in the same place, cutting parts out one at a time with a hand router. The two I have approached for help (So-Cal Teardrops and Aero Teardrops) have been an amazing resource for me. Don’t be afraid to reach out to other makers for advice or to purchase materials in bulk. Their business is booming and it is unlikely you will be perceived as a threat. The teardrop world is still small and friendly like family.
I’ve never owned a manufactured RV but I would liken them to the kitchen cabinets you can buy off the shelf at Home Depot. They look like kitchen cabinets and work like kitchen cabinets but are not the same as the kitchen cabinets produced in a custom cabinet shop. I liken the trailers I build to the custom cabinet variety and the challenge is connecting with customers who can recognize the difference. That will be your market.
friz wrote:I can't imagine the liability involved in this kind of business would be worth the potential profits. Selling something intended for highway use is a giant legal target In my opinion.
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I can't imagine the liability involved ...
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