
This will be a light build, I'm not putting anything heavy on the roof like a RTT. I'm also counting on the galley wall, headboard, front roof spars to take the load as well.
Any thoughts?
tony.latham wrote:Any thoughts?
I think you need to cover the lower part of your floor framing with the wall. Seal the deal. And it'll look better.
Just take that exterior sheathing and extend it out another 1/4".
philpom wrote:I did mine as illustrated below (sorry, no fancy CAD for me). Seems strong to me and the pmf/dicor/butyl/roof patch have created a perfect seal in that area. Glued and screwed.
Side walls
Front and rear walls
steve cowan wrote:On this trailer the floor was attached to the frame cross members with self tapping screws [4 cross members] about a foot apart. The walls set on 3 flat flat iron tabs welded to the bottom of the frame to support the walls[3/4 inch ]. The walls were glued to the trailer side frame with pl premium and clamps til the glue set.Wanted to hide the iron frame and not have screws/bolts showing.
23Sojourney45 wrote:someone told me about self tapping screws in the RW (real world) but I didn't know if it would go through my frame, its 3/16th. I haven't researched if it did or not, I just assumed it wouldn't. Maybe I should look at that option as well.
terrymorse wrote:23Sojourney45 wrote:someone told me about self tapping screws in the RW (real world) but I didn't know if it would go through my frame, its 3/16th. I haven't researched if it did or not, I just assumed it wouldn't. Maybe I should look at that option as well.
Yeah, no problem using self-tapping screws in 26 gauge steel. The "trick" is to use the right size drill bit:
For #6 screw, hole should be 0.0995" (drill size 39).
For #8 screw, hole should be 0.113" (drill size 33).
For #10 screw, hole should be 0.1285" (drill size 30).
Edit: 26 gauge is not 3/16ths, it's one tenth of 3/16ths. Duh, senior moment.
I'd be drilling and tapping that hefty 3/16ths metal, then using machine screws. My go to reference for drilling and tapping is on the Little Machine Shop site.
RBB wrote:FWIW:
The 1971 Skamper Pop Up that was the "donor frame" for my build has the floor attached to the frame with self taping screws on the frame. That was the ONLY thing attaching the entire body to the frame... roughly 3 doz self tapping #6 screws through the floor, and into the frame.
I intend to do this, with a bit more back up/overkill as well!
23Sojourney45 wrote:I'm assuming that you're countersinking the carriage bolts so you can hide them and protect them from the elements.
23Sojourney45 wrote:The sister board will help carry the weight of your 1 inch thick wall. Its going to be a heavy build with the overkill yeh?
Return to Teardrop Construction Tips & Techniques
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests