7 x 14 Trail Boss

Hello,
New guy here, looking to covert a 7x14 Trail Boss into a mini toy-hauler/camper. We have two small quads that I figure will fit just about perfectly. I am going to try to apply the K.I.S.S. principle to this project and not get crazy, but I have a tendency to over-think and over-build things. I also want to be able to use it as a regular cargo trailer should the need arise.
I recently acquired the trailer from my cousin, who used it to tow his Harley trike to shows and such. On one of his road trips the rear axle, street side, bearing grenaded and trashed the spindle beyond repair. I’m guessing the trike took a bad hop inside and a rear wheel landed pretty hard, causing the square-tube cross-frame below to bow down an inch or two. So the trailer sat for about 4 years before I acquired it. Fortunately it’s the desert here, so it’s been preserved and still in pretty good shape otherwise. The only thing I’ve done to it so far is to replace the whole axle assembly, tow it home, tear out the oily carpet, and remove some hooks and such from the walls. Oh, almost everything attached to the walls was done so with self-tapping screws that went all the way through the outside skin, leaving little holes all over.
Here it sits:


A sample of the interior:

From the factory it has a rear loading ramp, side door, ceiling vent, and one interior dome light. No insulation or interior walls. Long-term goals are for it to have:
Cabinet up front at the nose which will house: a small ice-box, sink, 12v water pump, on-demand water heater, grey/fresh water jerry-cans, and whatever electrical converters/fusebox etc. are needed.
Overhead cabinet for storage
Going with an external shower set-up
Install whatever is required to take advantage of shore power, maybe even water if available.
A/C and Heat
Fully insulated
Fold-up beds
Install windows
Spare tire carrier mounted to loading ramp
Toolbox, batteries, and propane on the tongue
Solar
I measured out the frame work and re-created using 3D software. The colors were added to aid in depth-perception when viewing at different angles. Everything grey is future-state additions/modifications.


I don’t anticipate this being a quick build due to time/money constraints. My immediate goal is to get it road-worthy (check on the other axle bearings/brakes, fix frame and floor, new tires, check wiring, etc) by January.
New guy here, looking to covert a 7x14 Trail Boss into a mini toy-hauler/camper. We have two small quads that I figure will fit just about perfectly. I am going to try to apply the K.I.S.S. principle to this project and not get crazy, but I have a tendency to over-think and over-build things. I also want to be able to use it as a regular cargo trailer should the need arise.
I recently acquired the trailer from my cousin, who used it to tow his Harley trike to shows and such. On one of his road trips the rear axle, street side, bearing grenaded and trashed the spindle beyond repair. I’m guessing the trike took a bad hop inside and a rear wheel landed pretty hard, causing the square-tube cross-frame below to bow down an inch or two. So the trailer sat for about 4 years before I acquired it. Fortunately it’s the desert here, so it’s been preserved and still in pretty good shape otherwise. The only thing I’ve done to it so far is to replace the whole axle assembly, tow it home, tear out the oily carpet, and remove some hooks and such from the walls. Oh, almost everything attached to the walls was done so with self-tapping screws that went all the way through the outside skin, leaving little holes all over.

Here it sits:


A sample of the interior:

From the factory it has a rear loading ramp, side door, ceiling vent, and one interior dome light. No insulation or interior walls. Long-term goals are for it to have:
Cabinet up front at the nose which will house: a small ice-box, sink, 12v water pump, on-demand water heater, grey/fresh water jerry-cans, and whatever electrical converters/fusebox etc. are needed.
Overhead cabinet for storage
Going with an external shower set-up
Install whatever is required to take advantage of shore power, maybe even water if available.
A/C and Heat
Fully insulated
Fold-up beds
Install windows
Spare tire carrier mounted to loading ramp
Toolbox, batteries, and propane on the tongue
Solar
I measured out the frame work and re-created using 3D software. The colors were added to aid in depth-perception when viewing at different angles. Everything grey is future-state additions/modifications.


I don’t anticipate this being a quick build due to time/money constraints. My immediate goal is to get it road-worthy (check on the other axle bearings/brakes, fix frame and floor, new tires, check wiring, etc) by January.