Group: "Hi Fotbr!"
So, about me: early 30s software developer from the heartland, hobby woodworker, amateur machinist, and a fat guy who's getting tired of tent camping. Adding one and one and coming up with three is my specialty, so I figured what better way to indulge some of my hobbies and cure my tent problem than to build my own camper. I saw the first teardrop that I remember on a trip to Acadia National Park in the early 90s, and the design stuck with me, and after bit of consulting with the great oracle (google) I found myself here more and more often.
Now, about that problem. I can't decide what to build.
I like the idea of a basic teardrop. But being rather well fed, I'm not sure that a small teardrop is really for me. So while sorting through some of my childhood toys, I ran across my train set, and an idea popped into my head that I've never quite been able to shake: I can build a caboose scaled to fit nicely behind my Rav4 - room to sleep, room to sit, door on the side for me, door on the back for the galley. I first thought about all wood construction on a HF frame. Then I saw the post here that I cannot find back - Fred, I think was the guys name - formerly from Alaska, builds in steel, aluminum, blue foam, skinned with aluminum, and built a small one for a young lady from California -- in any case, I thought that would be within my abilities since most of a caboose structure will be straight and square corners.
My goal is to figure out what to build - either a larger traditional teardrop, or my mini-caboose, and start the build over the winter, with the hope of making a trip late next summer or early fall to Minnesota's north shore on Lake Superior.
So I'm here to continue to read a lot, post a little, and ask stupid questions when I can't figure something out on my own.
-F