Found your forum while doing an image search for teardrop trailers. I do a bit of motorcycle touring (close to 20k miles in trips alone over the past few years) and traditionally have done it all sleeping on the ground. A couple of summers ago I built and towed a small cargo trailer (Harbor Freight trailer, Sears car topper cargo box), and after seeing some small home-built tear drop campers I decided I want to build my own.
I'm in my usual place of having about 20 projects going on at once, but I'm doing my best to consolidate and sell off some of them so I can focus on building a camper trailer and getting my new sidecar rig back up to being roadworthy. My initial idea was to ditch the "car" and use the frame to support a very small tear drop enclosure just wide enough for me and the wife, but that would mean I couldn't tote my boys around in the hack on the weekends. So I'll stick with a trailer for now. As I'm looking at towing behind (or maybe even on, someday) a motorcycle, I'm extremely interested in a super-lite build, and I'm sure there are some experts (or experienced novices, at least) around here on using materials lighter than steel and 3/4" plywood, so I'll be reading around and seeing what you guys have come up with so far.
My thought at the moment is to build something the width of my full-size air mattress (platform over-fender, to keep it as narrow as possible), with storage under the deck to keep weight low and easily re-distributed. I've been looking at lots of pictures and still need to get into a solid modeling program (like SolidWorks, it's the best way for me to get ideas "onto paper") and see if I can work out some dimensional details to my satisfaction before I start worrying too much about materials, but I'd love to be able to stay around or under 300 lb empty. It's a huge stretch of a weight goal, I know, but I'm thinking that with a bit of creativity, maybe it's not TOO far out of the realm of possibility.
Anyway, I look forward to reading around some more getting to know you guys and your projects!
