Flooring

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Flooring

Postby Ron Dickey » Sun Jan 02, 2005 6:59 pm

the most important part I would think is flooring.

Plywood what thinkness, one layer or 2 (with insolation)

Type of wood any or certain woods.

is there more?

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Re: Flooring

Postby mikeschn » Sun Jan 02, 2005 7:11 pm

Ron Dickey wrote:the most important part I would think is flooring.

Plywood what thinkness, one layer or 2 (with insolation)

Type of wood any or certain woods.

is there more?

Ron


Flooring can be 3/4". You can build a subfloor out of 3/4" thick pine, or 2x4's ripped in half. The subfloor will look similar to this one on Larry's page... http://www.outbackteardrop.com/misc/hrmechanix.jpg?

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Postby Eric Adams » Sun Jan 02, 2005 11:46 pm

I used 3/4" Advantech flooring. Warranteed to last for 50yrs. :D

Cuts real nice, drills and counter-sinks nice also. 8)

All non-seen components will be made of this. Its supposed to withstand being under water. Had a local guy try it...not on purpose. :roll:
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Postby SteveH » Mon Jan 03, 2005 8:08 am

I went low tech....3/4" CD exterior plywood sealed on the bottom with roofing tar. The way I figure it, it's got to be 100% better than a canvas floor in a TENT! :thumbsup:
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Postby Eric Adams » Mon Jan 03, 2005 11:24 pm

SteveH wrote:I went low tech....3/4" CD exterior plywood sealed on the bottom with roofing tar. The way I figure it, it's got to be 100% better than a canvas floor in a TENT! :thumbsup:


The advantech ended up being $21.50 for a 4' X 8' sheet in 3/4". :D Not a bad deal.
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Postby SteveH » Tue Jan 04, 2005 7:58 am

Eric,

I think that is less than I paid for the plywood. :o
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Postby Eric Adams » Tue Jan 04, 2005 7:23 pm

SteveH wrote:Eric,

I think that is less than I paid for the plywood. :o


My current problem is that a sheet of 3/4" ACX in 4 X 10 is gonna cost $75 a sheet!! :cry:
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Postby SteveH » Tue Jan 04, 2005 7:57 pm

3/4" ACX in 4 X 10 is gonna cost $75 a sheet


It's the length you are paying for. However, I bought 3/4 birch veneer both sides 4X10' here for $77.
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Postby norm perkiss » Tue Jan 04, 2005 9:08 pm

I used 4x8' x 1/2" AC ply. Our Tear is 5x9'. I pieced the floor with the seams over the cross braces. There is a very slight flex with just the ply. With the mattress on top, the feel is solid. The mattress helps to distribute the weight and any flex is not noticable.

We have a Coleman Pop-up Tent trailer. The floor on it is an oriented strand board of some type. There is no visable sealer on it. I'm not sure of the thickness.

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Postby Eric Adams » Tue Jan 04, 2005 9:19 pm

norm perkiss wrote:I used 4x8' x 1/2" AC ply. Our Tear is 5x9'.

Norm


What'd you do about the sides??
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Postby norm perkiss » Wed Jan 05, 2005 9:40 am

I used the Kuffel Creek plans for the Comet and Cubby as a guide. It's a Cubmet...

The sides are CDX 1/2" ply with 1x2 fir and poplar for "studs" and 1/4" paneling on the inside. I opted to make the height at 54". Using 9'x4' ply, I routed an overlapping seam to join the ply on the 9' side. Lots of Gorilla Glue.

The plywood hangs over the frame. The sides are bolted to the frame as well as glued and screwed to the "sill plate" and the "studs". The ply was sort of squirrely at first, but adding the "studs", the cross spars, and the cabinets, it is very solid.

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Postby Ron Dickey » Sun Jan 16, 2005 10:50 pm

I do not think I will be putting much aluminum on mine maybe the top but the sides will be wood.

But I had a thought

could the floor have an alumium sheet on the bottom to protect from weather , stones, and backroad ground stuff.

If I used that I could use 1/2 inch plywood on the bottom.

that ripped 2 by 4 does look attractive though.

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Postby steve wolverton » Mon Jan 17, 2005 10:00 am

Ron Dickey - I'm not sure why you couldn't use 1/2" plywood as your flooring w/o the aluminum skin. I don't think you really need it. I'm using 1/2" BCX as my floor and it seems to have worked out fine. I sealed the bottom with epoxy, but emulsion would probably work just as well. The foam for your bedding (or mattress) would also displace the weight on the floor.

Anything thicker would be more weight of course. I think (I may be off on this) that plywood weighs roughly:

1/4" = 25 lbs.
1/2" = 50 lbs.
3/4" = 75 lbs.

I'm not sure of your tow vehicle, but weight was a big concern of mine while building.

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Postby madjack » Mon Jan 17, 2005 8:00 pm

Ron Dickey wrote:I do not think I will be putting much aluminum on mine maybe the top but the sides will be wood.

But I had a thought

could the floor have an alumium sheet on the bottom to protect from weather , stones, and backroad ground stuff.

If I used that I could use 1/2 inch plywood on the bottom.

that ripped 2 by 4 does look attractive though.

Ron


...I am planning touse an aluminum sheet on the bottom of the tear I am currently constructin...mainly because I just want to
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Postby Denny Unfried » Mon Jan 17, 2005 8:58 pm

madjack wrote:
Ron Dickey wrote:I do not think I will be putting much aluminum on mine maybe the top but the sides will be wood.

But I had a thought

could the floor have an alumium sheet on the bottom to protect from weather , stones, and backroad ground stuff.

If I used that I could use 1/2 inch plywood on the bottom.

that ripped 2 by 4 does look attractive though.

Ron


...I am planning touse an aluminum sheet on the bottom of the tear I am currently constructin...mainly because I just want to
madjack 8)


Why not just let it breathe? If you clad it with metal it will hold in moisture and take a long time to dry which of course leads to spongy plywood (failed wood). If you just use the plywood with a good sealer it will dry and last for a lifetime.

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