Hello, everyone!
Happy belated New Year!
To rekindle an aging thread, I found some sources for answers to my own questions. I still have to make heads and tails from a lot of this(it's been two decades since I had any use for math beyond 'rithmetic), it's a start.
I think much of this will apply to "regular" teardrop design and construction also and I truly hope I'm not being redundant by posting these links here. A word of warning - a lot of this info is very technical and geared towards building construction, but could be "scaled down" to TDs. Well, off we go.
The first link is to the "Wood Handbook" by the United States Forest Products Laboratory. As you already guessed, it has a plethora of information on wood. It's 486 pages long and is available in separate chapters or as a single 15MB download. I like the price too. $0.00 in electronic(PDF) format.
http://www.fpl.fs.fed.us/documnts/fplgt ... gtr113.htm
The next resource was "discovered" as a reference for some of the design chapters in the "Handbook" - it's the Engineered Wood Association. You will need to register to be able to download the PDF's, but it's easy and Freeeeeee...(sorry for getting carried away here...) And they haven't spammed me yet. The link is:
www.apawood.org
They have an inane(imho) numbering system for their articles and the ones I think are pertinent to TDs are these:
Y510 Plywood Design Specification - the "starting point", contains data on all kinds of plywood
S811 Supplement 1 (to PDS) - Design and Fabrication of Plywood Curved Panels (profiles and hatches)
U813 Supplement 3 - Design and Fabrication of Plywood Stressed-Skin Panels(floors, walls, doors and roofs and what caused me to start this thread - the desire to build something that has enough strenght for years to come, not weigh a ton, while avoiding a trailer and not being a
guesstimate)
U814 Supplement 4 - Design and Fabrication of Plywood Sandwich Panels (same concerns as for U813)
Technical Topics TT-003 Bending Plywood
These articles are just the beginning, the APA website contains more info on plywood finishing, gluing, repair, crates, furniture frames and some transportation applications, too numerous to mention here.
I would really appreciate your opinions on this and also, if your "calculational" skills are more up-to-date than mine, some help in scaling the 2X4s used in the design examples to 1X2s, 2X2s, etc. If you "dare" to tread in these "dangerous" waters and think I overlooked an easier solution, please don't hesitate to let me know what a dodo I've been...
Thank you!
Ilya