Pmullen503 wrote:By plastic, I meant the plexiglass top which as you can see can't maintain it's shape without the wooden cross bars. The marine canvas cover would be nice for storage and travel, and it does eliminate any hatch leaks.
djdawg wrote:Pmullen503 wrote:By plastic, I meant the plexiglass top which as you can see can't maintain it's shape without the wooden cross bars. The marine canvas cover would be nice for storage and travel, and it does eliminate any hatch leaks.
I might be mistaken but there is no plexiglass stop. There is a screened area underneath the cover. So if you remove the top cover you could do some stargazing but not get eaten up by mosquitoes LOL.
Tom&Shelly wrote:djdawg wrote:Pmullen503 wrote:By plastic, I meant the plexiglass top which as you can see can't maintain it's shape without the wooden cross bars. The marine canvas cover would be nice for storage and travel, and it does eliminate any hatch leaks.
I might be mistaken but there is no plexiglass stop. There is a screened area underneath the cover. So if you remove the top cover you could do some stargazing but not get eaten up by mosquitoes LOL.
Interesting concept! Like a tent, and I imagine it would work as well while camping.
When I started shopping for Jeeps ten years ago, I was told the canvas tops last about 5 years (which is why I chose a hard top). So, I'd expect the top on this teardrop might have a similar life span. Probably better if tarped or kept in a garage when not in use. After all, most camping tents are stored most of their lives.
Wonder how it holds up to being driven? Perhaps the airflow over it will keep it from encountering too many hard objects.
Tom
tony.latham wrote:Two people in a teardrop need lots of ventilation. I owned a little 4 x 10 that didn't have a rooftop fan. Opening the windows and turning on the little computer fan didn't cut it.
Perhaps I can't see it, but do the hatch struts lock in place? They need to so the wind doesn't rip it off.
And unless you and your spouse are a couple of skinny marathoners, go for a 5-wide.
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T
djdawg wrote:Here are some additional pictures some of other models. I'm completely flummoxed on how they attached the screen to the trailer and finished it off. But then again I'm not a carpenter guy although I did build a hot dog cart haha...
absolutsnwbrdrgreygoos wrote:djdawg wrote:Here are some additional pictures some of other models. I'm completely flummoxed on how they attached the screen to the trailer and finished it off. But then again I'm not a carpenter guy although I did build a hot dog cart haha...
There are a few builds on here that are convertible types with screens. There is a member on here that built one who I think his name is snowbird? Perhaps he might pipe in. He also did another one called X Cubed? As far as keeping the screen in you can get flexible spline holders from big box stores and roll it in.
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