Clint Sanderson here. Just registered.
My wife and I live in Southern California. We currently own a "Little Guy teardrop" (5' wide) ... that supposedly is "built by the Amish." What utter nonsense ... so, we're going to build our own. One very serious build endeavor that caught our eye(s) and encouraged us to register was Dave McCam's ATMA Travelear. What an absolutely superb design and build!
We own a pair of Accuride 7950 full-extension drawer guides (36" extension, supporting 350-lbs) for some (imagined) pop-out. I think we may purchase another pair for an additional (weight-balanced, side to side ) pop-out on the opposing side of the compact travel trailer. Additionally, we're looking into sensible pop-UP design options to allow for a walking (interior) galley.
I am an architectural, mechanical, and structural designer by trade.
My wife is a mechanical and biomedical engineer.
We're both old enough to have become pretty expert in old-fashioned drafting and design techniques (yet young enough to responsibly apply software applications ... in progressive order, like AutoCAD, SketchUp, and Solidworks). I still have books that sport trig tables, and whole texts on spherical trig tables. We are both HP calculator fanatics from way back — from the HP11 through the HP48. Additionally, I bought my first computer ... the IBM PC
no hard disk drive ... just floppies).
added a pair of full-height (5¼" floppy disk drives) at $260 apiece, then
added a 10MB hard disk drive (that's not GB), full height for about $750 (value, back in 1982 ... calculate the value vs. today's dollar)
I/we are looking forward to sharing design concepts and real solutions for temporary, compact, and comfortable living,
¡Saludos a todos!
Clint