Thanks to everybody for keeping this subject alive.
A few nights ago, while surfing for "stressed skin" panels, I stumbled into the
www.apawood.org site. After simple and free registration I had access to a bunch of PDFs with a lot of useful information, IMHO.
I thought that "Plywood Design Specification" and supplements 3 and 4 would be of use to teardroppers. The math didn't seem beyond 8th grade and even though these documents are geared towards building construction, I think the methods described could be applied to the TD design as well.
Somewhere in this forum I saw how someone built some foam core panels and was standing on them for strength tests. To me this is a "stone-age" approach to engineering. I'm dusting off my arithmometer and sending my abacus away for recalibration!...
I hope I'm not taking the fun out of designing and building the T&TTTs, I just want to build something that will be safe to use for years to come. May be some of us could put our heads together and come up with several "canned" platform/pan designs, where "if you put this stick together with this one using that type of glue" it would support this many pounds(sorta' like axles - you get this one and it will support that many lbs)?... Or, if these already exist(specific dimensions, loads and hopefully road-tested), would you let me know?
I will definitely throw some numbers together for the materials I find data for and I will try(no promises here) to put together a spreadsheet to ease the pains of the mathematically challenged among us.
What d'y'all think?(Sorry, Paula Dean I'm NOT)
Thanks in advance and have great holidays y'all!!(Just had to squeeze one more in, though I've never been there myself and speak with a Russian accent, one of my cousins went to law school in Dekatur and a very good friend of mine is originally from Marieta(not sure how to spel...), Georgia)
Ilya
