working on it wrote: I had a 50"x60" (220 lb.) frame on 8" wheels with an overall length of 102" to start with. Now, 2 weeks later, I've reinforced all areas, boxed in a 50" x 96" area with 1.5"x 2.5" tube, and lengthened and strengthened the tongue with new 3"x 3" x .188 square tube (to a new total length of 140"). Plus, I've installed new 5 on 4.5" hubs, and gone to 14" wheels. I haven't put the new fenders on yet, but I estimate that the new rolling weight at a frog's hair under 500 lbs. My goal at coming in at under 1000 lbs/100 lbs tongue weight seems very iffy right now.
mattiker wrote:Picked up a decent axle with leaf springs not too long ago, and am starting on the actual frame itself. Building a 4x6 camper that will be under 1000 lbs and was wondering if there is a particular kind of steel tube that would work best for a frame. I've seen some builds with 2x3 tube that is 3/16 in thick, was wondering if there are other options that might work better. End goal is to have a trailer with a fixed floor and removable top. Thank you.
End goal is to have a trailer with a fixed floor and removable top.
KTM_Guy wrote:I used 2X2X1/8 for my build. It’s over kill. I built going by what others have done. After I had the frame built I was talking with my brother ( Who is a welding engineer) and he ran some numbers on different size tube and Channel. My next build will be 2X3 16 gauge. It is actually stronger than the 2X2X1/8 that I used and 30-40% lighter. He did Caution that joints needed to be tight fitting and in low stress areas. And the welds need to be of high quality. If you are not good welding on thin metal you can go up to 14 gauge which is the size between 16 gauge and 1/8” (11 gauge).
Todd
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