The pics are numbered, so if you sort them by "imagename" and "ascending" you will get them in the order they were taken.
I bought an old trashed teardrop on the cheap. Not sure what you folks would call it design-wise. Here's a pic:
I got it home to find a lot of rotten wood underneath the aluminum. Figured I would just do nearly everything from scratch. If you go to the gallery you can see the extent of the mess.
In its original (to me) condition I found the following problems:
1. Rotten exterior wood, and an especially rotten hatch.
2. Incorrect piano hinge on the hatch.
3. A badly jury-rigged suspension, and an axle that was really too short for the project.
4. incorrectly installed subfloor.
5. the abundant use of roofing repair tape everywhere that the prior owner could not do things correctly.
6. incorrectly installed water tank, which doesn't make sense because. . .
7. The prior owner apparently ripped out the galley.
8. Also, while he very nicely lengthened the tongue, he did a terrible job of installing the lengthened tongue.
9. Missing brake/running lights.
10. Total mess of wiring.
11. Badly installed aluminum skin.
I first tore down everything until all the rotten wood was gone, and further removed everything that was just the wrong materials, even if those things would work in a pinch. I was left with:
1. The trailer frame.
2. The side walls.
3. Interior wall paneling.
4. an uninstalled water tank.
Then I started rebuilding stuff from there. After ripping out the subfloor, I started from the bottom up.
1. I re-installed the water tank using steel straps that you would use to hold your water heater to the wall in the garage (this may just be a California thing due to earthquakes).
1a. I installed a new, longer axle, which put the tires outside the body of the trailer. I intend to get larger diameter tires (and I want to make them up as rally wheels with a hubcap and beauty ring, if I can!).
2. I added supports into the frame under the floor.
3. I replaced the insulation in the floor.
4. I cut holes to install plumbing to fill the tank and feed a potential faucet. I left space for a drain.
5. I installed new subfloor that actually goes all the way across the floor, rather than leaving about 3 inches of frame exposed on each side.
6. I installed a sheet vinyl floor onto the subfloor.
7. I replaced a lot of poorly installed/rotten 1X2 ribs with 2X2 ribs.
8. I replaced the interior plywood. The prior owner had used laminate flooring planks as the interior ceiling, just forcing it into place and nailing it to the ribs.
9. I took a diamond-plate truck bedbox that I had laying around and turned it into a tongue box.
10. I built a battery box to go into the tongue box, cut and installed louvred vents, and then installed the battery box into the tongue box.
11. I installed posts and a main battery kill switch.
12. I installed basic wiring, a fusebox, a negative busbar.
13. I started installing a cabinet to hide all the wiring, and to use for storage, above the head of the cabin.
That's where I am for now. Take a look at the gallery for some of the good stuff.