Hi, thanks for all the help many of you have already provided in the threads and build pages. I'm excited and a bit anxious about some of the things lying ahead of me in my first project of this type, however I have a positive attitude, a tolerance for mistakes (and learning from them) and a few skills and power tools!
One of the things I have learned by all my research and in looking at your builds is that I'm not going to be overly ambitious or spend too much. My main goal here is a camping alternative to tent camping, as my 52 year old frame no longer tolerates sleeping on the hard ground and I want a real bed and a bit of shelter from mountain winds. I've been using an army cot which is a big set up from just a foam pad, and not having to set up and break down camp would put me in more places and on more weekends. It would also be good to have a minimal galley, nothing fancy, just a place for my propane stove, a cooler, water jugs and a couple boxes of supplies and utensils. No plumbing and minimal electrical system, although a small a/c is looking very desirable as I'm in the desert southwest and do anticipate some hotter weather camping. I do not expect to be out in sub-freezing temps, so I'm leaning toward light weight and easy construction.
Finally got a C-3 MOPAR hitch for my 2000 Jeep Cherokee, which is my adventure vehicle, and plan on having it installed with wiring harness by a pro this week. My vehicle only has 100k on the clock, and I only use it for weekend hauling and trips, so I expect many more years of service from the venerable XJ.
Yes, I do plan on taking the trailer off the pavement, I like to camp remote and that often means rough, washed out rocky trails. I've look closely at many of the purpose-built "off-road" designs, and I always come to the conclusion that the builders are defeating their own purpose by adding significant extra weight which causes the need for even more significant extra heavy duty construction. Let me know if I'm way off base here, but a lighter rig behind the Jeep seems to be a lot more desirable than a Sherman tank. As a kid my Dad pulled the old 73 Apache popup behind the Surburban up some pretty rough mountain trails with few mishaps. If you take your time and choose your path wisely, there's no need for the trailer to have the 31x10 tires or ground clearance of the Jeep.
That said, I'm looking at the HFT 4x8 1195lbs folder as a base. I plan on taking a while building the trailer, making some mods like aluminum corner braces (for strength and jack stands in the back), and once all is square, welding everything including bolts for more rigidity and being able to not come undone on 50 miles of washboard road. I will probably modify it from folding to rigid, as I have plenty of covered parking at the house so space in no concern.
FOAM and FRP: I'm not aesthetically married to classic styles, fine wood work or any shape/style in particular. I am intrigued at what folks are doing with foam and FRP panels as I do want a light build. I was at Home Depot on Sunday, pulling out foam and FRP panels and I like the strength-to-weight ratio.
Besides a jack stand and trailer spare, I'd also like to carry a spare from my Jeep, which is a good 75 pounds. Right now it sits on the roof, which is a wind and gas mileage disaster and the hardware for it is a lot of added weight. I know I just said I wanted a light weigh build, but it either goes on the car or on the trailer.
I will have many Newbie questions I'm sure, looking forward to meeting you guys and documenting my slow build!
Aud
El Paso, TX USA