Weight and Balance

My wife and I are in the process of designing our 1st teardrop, which has evolved to a 10 x 5 benroy with 14 inch wheels, with air conditioning, two 6 v batteries (at least notionally), storage up front (in lieu of a tongue box), and a 24 inch deep galley. We intend to build it mostly following Steve Fredrick's techniques, except we plan to use 3/4" plywood for the skeleton instead of 1 by pine.
Our original weight goal was something slightly north of 1000 lbs, but, well, I think the military calls it "mission creep". After a fairly elaborate weight and balance calculation, I'm getting about 1540 lbs overall fully loaded (but not yet including fiber glass and paint/bedliner), and I wonder whether others here would comment on 1) whether that sounds about right? and 2) is this going to be a problem for our 2 door Jeep Wrangler to tow across the US (hopefully more than once)?
We plan to have a custom chassis built mostly out of 2 x 2 1/8" steel tube (3.05 lbs/ft), with a composite tongue ala Andrew Gibbens' "Simple Tongue Strength Table". With the frame, axle, 3 tires, and tongue, I calculate about 544 lbs.
For the wood and foam in the cabin, hatch, galley cabinets, etc. I get 534 lbs. I'm using published values for 1/4" plywood (22 lbs/sheet) 1/2" plywood (28.5 lbs/sheet) and 3/4" plywood (60.8 lbs/sheet), as well as estimates for poplar spars, foam, etc. As mentioned, I haven't yet included fiber glass, epoxy, or paint.
Then (here's the mission creep) the AC weighs about 72 lbs, the two 6 v batteries are about 62 lbs apiece, and our camping gear (folding table, folding chairs, privacy tent, easy up, etc.) to go in the forward storage (individually measured) comes out to 83 lbs. That doesn't count what goes in the galley: the propane stove (10 lbs), cooking items, 5 gallons of water (42 lbs), 20 lbs of ice and cold stuff in a cooler, and ~40 lbs of food.
I put all of this in a spreadsheet and also did some balance equations. Initially the camper was nose heavy unless I moved the axle too far forward (interfered with the door), so I kept it at 40 inches from the rear, moved the batteries from the front utility compartment to the galley, and moved the spare tire from the tongue to the left side behind the axle. what's left is, as I said above, a total loaded weight of about 1540 lbs, and a tongue weight of 182 lbs.
Our 2 door Jeep Wrangler has a rated tow weight of 2000 lbs with 200 lbs on the tongue. So, we're under specs, but will we have long term problems if we take the teardrop, say, from New Mexico to Update New York, or to the Northwest US/Canada every Summer?
Thank you in advance for your comments!
Tom and Shelly
Our original weight goal was something slightly north of 1000 lbs, but, well, I think the military calls it "mission creep". After a fairly elaborate weight and balance calculation, I'm getting about 1540 lbs overall fully loaded (but not yet including fiber glass and paint/bedliner), and I wonder whether others here would comment on 1) whether that sounds about right? and 2) is this going to be a problem for our 2 door Jeep Wrangler to tow across the US (hopefully more than once)?
We plan to have a custom chassis built mostly out of 2 x 2 1/8" steel tube (3.05 lbs/ft), with a composite tongue ala Andrew Gibbens' "Simple Tongue Strength Table". With the frame, axle, 3 tires, and tongue, I calculate about 544 lbs.
For the wood and foam in the cabin, hatch, galley cabinets, etc. I get 534 lbs. I'm using published values for 1/4" plywood (22 lbs/sheet) 1/2" plywood (28.5 lbs/sheet) and 3/4" plywood (60.8 lbs/sheet), as well as estimates for poplar spars, foam, etc. As mentioned, I haven't yet included fiber glass, epoxy, or paint.
Then (here's the mission creep) the AC weighs about 72 lbs, the two 6 v batteries are about 62 lbs apiece, and our camping gear (folding table, folding chairs, privacy tent, easy up, etc.) to go in the forward storage (individually measured) comes out to 83 lbs. That doesn't count what goes in the galley: the propane stove (10 lbs), cooking items, 5 gallons of water (42 lbs), 20 lbs of ice and cold stuff in a cooler, and ~40 lbs of food.
I put all of this in a spreadsheet and also did some balance equations. Initially the camper was nose heavy unless I moved the axle too far forward (interfered with the door), so I kept it at 40 inches from the rear, moved the batteries from the front utility compartment to the galley, and moved the spare tire from the tongue to the left side behind the axle. what's left is, as I said above, a total loaded weight of about 1540 lbs, and a tongue weight of 182 lbs.
Our 2 door Jeep Wrangler has a rated tow weight of 2000 lbs with 200 lbs on the tongue. So, we're under specs, but will we have long term problems if we take the teardrop, say, from New Mexico to Update New York, or to the Northwest US/Canada every Summer?
Thank you in advance for your comments!
Tom and Shelly