Hi, my name is Gene and I'm new here. I'm contemplating building two teardrops; one oriented as an offroader for my Trooper since my new job will have me spending a lot of time traveling and working in disaster zones (not very unusual down here in FL), and a second ultralight to pull behind my wife's Fusion hybrid that she plans to get with my pay raise.
At this point, I am starting to lay the groundwork for my off-road camper since I already have the trailer frame (coil-sprung with a looong tongue and a 4x4x8 box on it that is about to come off). I plan to for it to look somewhat similar to Steve's green off-road camper.
I'm intrigued by some of the lightweight ideas, mostly for hers but also how I can incorporate some of them into mine.
Is anyone concerned with the increased rotational speeds caused by smaller wheels and tires? Do you think this has an adverse affect on bearing life? I plan to use standard tires on both for spare interchangeability (and off-road ability on mine) but was wondering if anyone was concerned that an 8" wheel would be spinning much faster at 70 than say a 15"?
Has anyone looked at aircraft wheels? They're available in aircraft junkyards and while the bearings/spindles might not be up to it (they're very lightweight and made to go 50MPH for several seconds at a time), I wonder if they might be adapted to a standard spindle/bearing set? Finding DOT-approved tires might be an issue though.
Do you think that glass over foam composite construction would work as well as/be strong as/light as wood? While that is a given for her trailer (very sleek and lightweight, matching her Fusion in general outline and color), mine is a more traditional box, and while we don't have extreme rock-crawling here in FL, we still like to spend time in the woods with the kids in addition to the aforementioned disaster work. Would it be strong enough when used in such a slab-sided configuration? Is it lighter than wood when used in such a way? While my truck will obviously have higher towing limits than her hybrid, it is still a 4-cyl diesel, so I do want to watch what I lug it down with.
Thoughts?