Tomterrific wrote:You have designed much in a small space. Good job. My only critique is the height and width will make towing at freeway speeds tough. A longer narrow camper will be easier to tow. Have you thought of a collapsible design?
I tow with 4 cylinders so torque is at a premium. A V8 will have less problems, of course.
Tt
Pmullen503 wrote:All that cabinetry and framing will add weight. I'd suggest less framing with foam board infill. Keep that cabinetry as light as possible. Thinner wood with tab and slot construction instead of thicker wood with fasteners. You can get away with foam board for some of the internal dividers which will also save some weight.
You've done a good job packing a lot in a small space. I'd also suggest you mock up the interior with cheap wood or even cardboard boxes to see what it will be like in terms of space. You may want more space with less storage.
tony.latham wrote:That's a serious chunk of planning.![]()
You may want to make sure that the front overhang isn't so much that it may make contact with the tow vehicle while backing. Since you've got all of that CAM work done, it'll be an easy thing to do from a top-camera view.
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Tony
OP827 wrote:Please don't get me wrong, I really appreciate your design and effort and will follow your progress, but having high CoG and wide body over a relatively narrow positioned wheels is somewhat inherently unsafe. The reason I am getting sensitive to this kind of shape, this pretty much reminded me my neighbor's home build. He put his wide camper that he later said that he did not like carrying in and out the bed of his truck and installed his camper on a utility trailer similar in size to your model. I had no knowledge at that time whether it was a good idea or not. Then one day I saw his truck in a driveway with all one side and roof badly damaged. I asked him what happened and he said that he lost control of his homebuilt trailer on a highway. Trailer was destroyed and the truck got damaged... Since then I started thinking that building a trailer with a low CoG and low air drag is a really good idea.
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troubleScottie wrote:Just a point on the air resistance. Although the flat/square rear of the trailer will add drag, the major factor is the cross sectional resistance. Anything not covered by the cross sectional area of the car is adding to the drag.
Drag = 1/2 * rho * C * A * V **2
Rho is fluid density
C is drag coefficient
A is cross sectional area
V is velocity.
Your vehicle is already handling its cross sectional area and any drag for its shape. Towing is adding in the trailer's effect.
There are other considerations : the flow or turbulence between the tow vehicle and trailer, flow under the trailer, fenders, shape of the trailer.
The drag coefficient (C) is dependent on the shape of the object in this case the trailer shape. For instance, a box has the worst at 1.0. A half wing eg the classic tear drop design is 0.09. A short cylinder is worse than a cube (1.15). A long cylinder is better than a cube (0.84). A trailer with rounded leading, side and rear edges is better than the simple box. I have not seen what is good enough rounding eg 1" radius or 1' radius or 1 meter radius.
As others have stated, the center of gravity (CoG) with the cabinets is pretty high. To go higher, one needs a wider base. How much -- no idea. Also the weight is on one side. Not sure if that affect it much. Most designs have their weight low, at floor level or below the trailer frame and the weight is distributed across the width or centered.
OP827 wrote:He put his wide camper that he later said that he did not like carrying in and out the bed of his truck and installed his camper on a utility trailer similar in size to your model.
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