by professorkx » Mon Jan 19, 2015 12:07 pm
A lot of this will depend upon how much you want to spend. If you have a high budget, aluminum frame can't be beat. However, if you are on a budget like me, you have to decide what's important. I'm analytical, so built a matrix for all of the regional manufacturers. Here are a few of key items that I considered.
- Luan or 3/8" plywood interior walls. I wanted 3/8" plywood, as this is easy to screw to during your build. Expensive to switch once you own the trailer.
- round or flat top. I wanted a round top because the trailers I evaluated gave me more height in the middle with the same wall height. I also felt round would be better for water runoff, but no proof of this. round top trailers are harder to build out, as you need to shape all of you cabinet top pieces to the contour of the ceiling for everything to look factory built. I have a step by step guide on doing this in my build post. Not that hard, just takes more time.
- I spent a lot of time measuring v-nose versus round nose. This would have moved me to a flat top, but at the time, I had not decided. I found that while i gained length in the middle, I lost length on the wall edge. Based upon the trailers I measured, I would have opted for the flat front for the longer walls
- How much room from the front corner to the man door. Since I was building cabinets up front, I wanted as close to 2 feet as possible.
- weight difference, as weight is an issue for my tow rig
- wall vent. didn't want one, and some trailers have one in the front up high and one in the rear down low. I would have had to fill these, so a deal killer for me.
- single/tandem axle
- rv door or bar lock man door. rv door was all i considered
- wood frame or steel frame in walls. I saw some wood framed trailers online, but wanted steel frame
- barn door or ramp. ramp doors are heavy, and since I have an aluminum ramp to load the bike, I opted for barn doors
- roof vent. If you are ordering, you can get anything, but I was buying from stock, so wanted a roof vent if this was the deciding factor.
- man door size. I wanted 32 inch, but not a deal killer either way. If this were the only difference in evaluation, this would make the decision.
You have indicated 6 foot or 7 foot wide. When I looked at these side-by-side in the same trailer, the decision to go 7 foot was easy, as it just felt bigger. I also settled on 14 foot long for the same reason, just felt bigger. Also, I wanted a queen sized bed to fold up to the wall vertically, which is only possible with a 7 foot wide. 6 foot wide means you have to fold up horizontally, which means less room when the bed is down.
Once I built my matrix and began to add information for trailers I found in a 500 mile radius, the right trailer was obvious.
Enjoy the process....