hallelujah wrote:Hello guys,
the short version of my name is Tony, I'm from Romania and I've found this website by means of the German T@b forum. When I saw the teardrops I immediately fell in love with them - realizing their value in my life.
My story is that I want my place to live in, as I'm now 28 and still living with the parents. In Romania even a single room flat costs about 25.000 USD and wages are somewhere around 600 USD thus owning a flat is not a quite affordable option not to mention that you're bound to jobs to afford living in it; so I've been seeking for alternatives. I have found them (in form of remote located land + cob house + as much as possible dependence from electricity) but where would I live until then? And the teardrop suits perfectly my needs as it's small and mobile, relatively cheap to build and doesn't require too much maintaining hassle (or so I think). I've joined this forum as I'd like to consult you guys in building one and get it right the first time.
One of the first questions would be how do these things fare during winter time as we had temperatures as low as -22F.
The second thing would be: I want to build the chassis out of stainless steel in order to build easy and keep down maintenance (corrosion issues). I've found a square profile pipe, 60x60 mm and 1.5 or 2 mm wall thickness (I've chosen this dimension based on two reasons: http://www.knott-trailer-shop.com/produ ... earing.htm the axle surface width that connects it to the chassis is 60 mm wide, and the width of the square ball coupling which is also 60 mm as shown here http://www.knott-trailer-shop.com/produ ... square.htm); as I don't have any building experience I would like to know if the reasoning is right. Besides this has anybody experience with stainless steel chassis building? Is the material right for off road teardrops? Which wall thickness do you recommend I should go with and why? (1.5 or 2 mm)?
Sincerely,
Tony
hallelujah wrote:Hi there Finnish mate,
thank you for your input.
So, with 5 cm styrofoam you still get cold. That is good to know. I've also planned for a small 2 kW LPG gas heater for just such occasions.
I plan building only the chassis of the teardrop in stainless steel (in 1.5 or 2 mm thick steel, this was the question referring to). The hull will be aluminum all right. I'm not crazy giving away a bucket full of money now when I know just how little it takes to get one's life back together.
Cheers,
Tony
hallelujah wrote:(such as not to use wood for heating, which would be impossible given the small size of a td anyway) ; to be sincere my highest aim is to heat the td with wood picked directly from nature but I have yet to find that small of a stove with air-intake directly from outside - to avoid co/co2 poisoning):
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