tony.latham wrote:is there a reason no one seems to go with a peaked roof?
Wouldn't you have to have a bottom chord to keep the A-frame members from pushing the walls apart?
T
I can think of two reasons not to build a peaked roof trailer, especially a TD or TTT (a small home-built,
not a standy, canned-ham, or humongous cargo conversion, of course):
- 1) added work in construction...Most small TD's & TTT's use spars to support the roof, which is usually made of thin plywood with suitable covering materials. Easy to attach, without any purlins, hangers, collars, ridgeboard as extra supporting structure, and without a ridgeline seam to waterproof (a lot of sealant, paint, etc to maintain, as compared to a flat roof). Besides, the supporting members will diminish any headroom that may have been hoped-for with a peaked roof.

- peaked roof structure.JPG (72.32 KiB) Viewed 5971 times
- 2) added overall height restricts garage clearance...Many builders want to store their trailers out of the weather during off-season, to avoid water and/or sun damage, in a garage or shed. Adding extra height, just for a few inches of "limited" usability, may make such storage impossible (unless one rolls it in/out on a special dolly, or smaller wheels). IMO, too much work for little gain. Fortunately, my chosen garage bay allowed me 10" clearance (now <2", after 6" diameter fishing rod/gear tube was mounted on the roof).
Granted, my little 4x8 squareback TTT is cramped inside, and just basically a box with a sloped front-end, but built as I designed it to fit in my garage (length & height restricted). I used 3/4" plywood with steel hardware (to support a flat 50"x 48" piece, requiring no spars underneath), and with no sag after 6.5 years, and capable of supporting double my weight.

- steel hardware used on TTT.jpg (67.21 KiB) Viewed 5971 times
Though my roof is flat, and has bolt-heads protruding thru it, I avoid
pooling of water on top problems by constant maintenance of the waterproofing, slightly angling the trailer 5 degrees (same as recommended for window A/C units) at camp to promote run-off, and always using a canopy overhead , because it always T-storms when I camp.