one day i'd like to build an ultra light TD to tow behind a smart fortwo, max weight has to be 330 kilos i believe.
the chassis will be alluminium to keep weight down, simple rubber torsion suspension.
for the body, i was thinking instead of a wooden frame, laminated with ply for the sides and interior with insulation in the voids, how about...
That rigid foam insulation board, the stuff that usually has a foil coating on both sides, kingspan is one brand name, celotex another i think.
i was thinking of having a wooden floor board over the chassis, the wheels would be inside the body, to allow a sitting area when the beds not made,
A slab of the foam board bonded to the floor board, then cut the sides out of the same stuff, would have to have a frame around the openings and galley hatch, not sure about the roof yet, maybe a lamination of the thinner foam boards to curve it, all glued together with some construction type adeshive.
Now i know that sounds stupid, but i'm not done, once walls, roof, floor etc are built out of the foam board, i'd take it to a fiberglass place that builds plastic boats/kit cars/grp baths or what ever, where they use those spray guns on a hose that feed chopped glass mat and the resin down to the nozzle for spraying,
and i'd get the whole sub structure coated inside and out in fiberglass,
no idea how much this would cost to do, but i'm thinking the foam boards would provide some of the rigidity as well as the insulation, and the fiberglass would hold it all together and add yet more rigidity, and make it all watertight,
does this sound feesable? sort of like making a fiberglass shell body, but the mould is the rigid foam boards and they are sandwiched between the inner and outer fiberglass shells.