pchast wrote:Welcome Scott.![]()
Luck beating that Obsessive Gene.
Its tough deciding when things are
'Good Enough.'
KCStudly wrote:Welcome to the forums and good luck with your build!
Advice 1: Learn how to post pics. We like pics.![]()
Advice 2: Don't let the time creep away from you. Everything will take longer than you think. For each step you will need to: design your plan; source material; figure out or make your tooling (sometimes requiring a design in itself, sourcing of more materials, doing the work to make jigs or templates, etc.); do the work (this is the part that most people imagine when they think of how long something will take); fix the screw ups (sometimes starting at the beginning); do the finish work (stain/poly, paint, etc.); and fix the screw-ups in the finish work. So don't slack off. Unless you have plenty of free time on your hands, and are building using a very simple method with few details, the next ten months will slip right by. To give you an example, I work on my build very regularly and am in the first 2nd half of my 4th year building, on top of a full year planning. Probably not typical, but I, too, tend to be obsessive and many of the more "particular" builds can easily take 3 or more years. Then again, some people whip them out like jelly beans, so...YMMV. My advice would be to stick to a simple plan and simple techniques, up to and including copying another well documented build that you like.
Advice 3: Have fun! Building something with your own hands should be mentally engaging and inwardly rewarding. Take pride in your work and enjoy doing it.![]()
Advice 4: I am assuming that you will be doing a bunk arrangement for the kids. There are plenty of good examples of people who have done that. Ryan's Wyoming Woody is a great build and definitely a good example to follow on build techniques and quality, but you can get more interior space out of a Benroy or canned ham profile. It can and has been done in a teardrop shape, but it might be easier to fit the family in a profile that is a little higher or not rounded off so much, at least not at the transitions to the floor. Just saying, plan your build out at least somewhat to scale and see if you will have enough room before deciding. Build a cardboard template or mock-up as needed to help figure door locations, cabinet locations, bunks, etc. Definitely do the 5 wide (as a minimum) with two doors (not negotiable) and consider profiles that are 9 to 10 ft in length.
aggie79 wrote:Miscellaneous thoughts:
1. You've made a great decision to start taking the kids camping while they're young. We started when my wife's kids got older and they just weren't interested that much as pre-teens and teens.
2. You have an ambitious schedule. As others have said, keep things simple and use pre-fabricated components where possible. I started with a simple hand-drawn sketch of the profile and started building from there. To minimize mistakes, I had to think ahead of how components and assemblies would come together. Glue, adhesive, paints, and finishes take time to cure. While something is curing be working on another part. My build took about 3-1/2 years working every other weekend on average. I bet I have two-months plus of weekends in just my doors alone.
3. One trick to minimize a flat front is to use a radius at the bottom. The front of my teardrop is the "trailer for two" profile with a 6" radius at the bottom.
4. Post lots of pictures (while time allows) of your build.
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