I get "Preview" and "Submit" mixed up. Forgive me if I double post.':?'
New guy here. But I've been lurking for several months. I must say that I'm a member of several other forums and lurk at a few others (none related to teardrops) and this is by far the most generally helpful and friendly forum I have visited.':thumbsup:'
I must also say that I may never build a teardrop. I'm retired so I have the time. And while I retired from hospital social work, I grew up in construction, and have worked as a carpenter, so I probably have most of the required skills. Truth is though Ive gotten lackadaisical in retirement and Im as likely to buy a small factory built trailer (or Class B motorhome) as I am build a teardrop. But maybe the cheap stingy b******d (or the prideful wood butcher) in me will motivate me to build and not buy.
If I build, I'll probably build a Benroy profile on a TS utility trailer (which I have ) using the materials and methods many of you have already used. But I am curious about possibly using composite panels.
I have a friend who manufactures Structural Insulated Panels. His stock-in-trade is OSB and Polystyrene (non-heat vacum bonded) panels for residential construction, but he has fabricated other types of panels, including panels of FRP and polystyrene. And (as an example) he can fabricate a 4'x8'x2" panel consisting of a foam core with thin okuma plywood on both sides and aluminum or fiberglass on one side that weighs about 25lbs.
I'm not asking for an engneering analysis (he can provide me one at some point) but I'm hoping you guys can give me some preliminary general feedback. Has any one used vacum bonded composite panels of any sort in their teardrops? Does this seem like a wreck waiting to happen? (want to avoid that eh.) Greatest thing since sliced bread? Dubious undertaking?':thinking:'
There is a heck of a lot of useful knowledge on this forum and your posts have already been of great help to me but I haven't found any info on this topic. If some of you old hands could give me useful feed back I would apprecieate it.
Anyway I'm glad to be an official member.
Jim