Estimating your teardrop weight

Sharon Heisley has done a magnificent job in cataloguing over a hundred teardrop weights and this has given the opportunity to reverse the process and say what does a typical teardrop weigh?
The data is shown in the graph below, for those that read graphs - weight up the vertical scale and plan area (body length times body width, both in feet) on the horizontal axis. The red squares are foamies, I believe, which shows they can be the lightest trailers. The biggest thing to notice is the huge range of weights at each size. This gives the most important conclusion - the weight of a trailer depends a lot on how heavily it is built. That sounds obvious, but it is important to recognise that when someone asks "how much does a 4x8 Benroy weigh?", there is not a single right answer, just a huge range of right answers.
Excel worked out the black average line thorough the middle and I've added the red 'Heavy' and green 'Light' lines by eye. These can be turned round into simple formulas for estimating trailer weight, as follows:
Light - Trailer weight (pounds) = 15 x Body Length (feet) x Body Width (feet)
Average - Trailer weight (pounds) = 25 x Body Length (feet) x Body Width (feet)
Heavy - Trailer weight (pounds) = 40 x Body Length (feet) x Body Width (feet)
And, yes, that means the heavy trailers are nearly three times the weight of the light trailers for any given size! That's why there isn't any one 'right' answer to what will/should my trailer weigh? You need to calibrate your own behaviour first. If you design aircraft structures for a living, you can probably build at the 'light' weight. If you don't believe plywood is made in any thickness but 3/4", you will probably build at the 'heavy' weight
The data is shown in the graph below, for those that read graphs - weight up the vertical scale and plan area (body length times body width, both in feet) on the horizontal axis. The red squares are foamies, I believe, which shows they can be the lightest trailers. The biggest thing to notice is the huge range of weights at each size. This gives the most important conclusion - the weight of a trailer depends a lot on how heavily it is built. That sounds obvious, but it is important to recognise that when someone asks "how much does a 4x8 Benroy weigh?", there is not a single right answer, just a huge range of right answers.
Excel worked out the black average line thorough the middle and I've added the red 'Heavy' and green 'Light' lines by eye. These can be turned round into simple formulas for estimating trailer weight, as follows:
Light - Trailer weight (pounds) = 15 x Body Length (feet) x Body Width (feet)
Average - Trailer weight (pounds) = 25 x Body Length (feet) x Body Width (feet)
Heavy - Trailer weight (pounds) = 40 x Body Length (feet) x Body Width (feet)
And, yes, that means the heavy trailers are nearly three times the weight of the light trailers for any given size! That's why there isn't any one 'right' answer to what will/should my trailer weigh? You need to calibrate your own behaviour first. If you design aircraft structures for a living, you can probably build at the 'light' weight. If you don't believe plywood is made in any thickness but 3/4", you will probably build at the 'heavy' weight