this is how they did the bend. Not quite as sharp.
asianflava wrote:When we checked out the RV show last weekend, there was a travel trailer that had an infared saund in the nose. It amounted to little more than a woon lined closet, but it sat 2 people. Just when you thought you'd seen it all.
Miriam C. wrote:Hi Lynn, Don't know if you have seen Barbs pictures of her curve. This looks like what you are saying I think.
Keith B wrote:Lynn... don't forget.. you have an interior ceiling to install too, some like to do it before the roof, but in your case, you need to be able to find your "structure"... the glue surface is needed for both. Your idea will work, others have use it...IF it were me.. I'd add three more spars at least in the curve....then you know you have enough, it's easier to bend the ply inside and out and it's easier to find the spars to screw too, etc. when securing for the glue.....on the 1/4 in. cuts... you want to kerf the plywood, do I understand you correctly?... well, sometimes that works.. but if you do that, you're cutting through 1/8" of the ply anyway, so why not just put 1/8 on times two then have the full 1/4.. I tried the kerf method on my 7" curve, without success and steaming wasn't enough.. I think steaming would work on your curve though, looks about 12 or 16"?, if that's the route you chose listen to those who've had success with it and- go slow... Personally, I don't think TBIII is "enough" for this application.. the roof is what creates the torsion structure and holds your camper together and keeps it from wiggling, etc.. it's built like an egg, VERY strong.... I would use F26 or Liquid Nail, some guys like Gorilla Glue.. just use something strong.. TBIII is great stuff, but I know when I lay floors on homes we use F26 and they DO NOT ever come lose or squeak or anything.... personal opinion. Again, F26 is very similar to Liquid Nail which you can fine anywhere, F26 is just what I know, both have good "inital tack" and they don't "drip" like TBIII....90 percent of my work is with TBIII, but there's a purpose and use for different glues.
Lynn Coleman wrote:Miriam C. wrote:Hi Lynn, Don't know if you have seen Barbs pictures of her curve. This looks like what you are saying I think.
thanks for the pics Miriam. Similar but different. We're thinking in terms of a solid 1/4 of a circle. It is the same as the ones in the side walls already. Below is a pic were you can make the 1/4 circle 3/4 ply out in the lower corner of the pic. I hope.
Lynn
Todah Tear wrote:Lynn,
Soaking the wood and bending it once it got plyable worked for me. I wrapped it around the frame of my tear after placed the interior ceiling material in (I painted the foil/bubble insulation material.) I used screws to fasten it to the spars. It held nicely and comformed to the shape of my tear (which has a tight radius in the front and back.).
Todah
Keith B wrote:Here's the link to F-26 http://www.leechadhesives.com/F26products.htm
Lynn Coleman wrote:Miriam C. wrote:Hi Lynn, Don't know if you have seen Barbs pictures of her curve. This looks like what you are saying I think.
DHAZARD wrote:Interesting clamp, that must be a well trained dog to stay until the glue dries.
Micro469 wrote:Lynn.. not sure what you mean by curves..... but I will tell you how I did it, it might help you. First i used 1/8 ply.. it curved real easy around the bend. You are going to need a spar or two around that top curve..as others have said. I used Steve Fredericks method... the first layer of1/8 overlaps the edge of the walls by an inch or two. Once this was glued down, I covered it with epoxy and then laid down my second layer of 1/8, and used the overlap to clamp the second layer down to the first layer. I also used straps front to back to clamp it down. Make sure it's clamped down properly because once it dries, you get what you got.....on mine it bubbled on one spot, and I have to live with it... Otherwise the method worked great and there's no way it's gonna come off...hope this helps....
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