mikeschn wrote:Looks cool... hey, there's no limit to what home based trailer builders can do. I especially like the way he replaced the coil springs with the gas springs.
Mike...
mikeschn wrote:...
JimQ... fewer seams and more storage. Sounds like a T@B XL to me!!! Of course you'd have to build it yourself.![]()
Mike...
Geron wrote:I sat in mine on several occasions and "calculated" a home built. Lot's of movable "joints" and numerous places to "weather seal." It has to "seal" for travel and then "seal" when set up.
angib wrote:Geron wrote:I sat in mine on several occasions and "calculated" a home built. Lot's of movable "joints" and numerous places to "weather seal." It has to "seal" for travel and then "seal" when set up.
Yes - I've done a couple of this sort of design but decided not to publish them as not only have you got all the sealing details to get right, but you have to make and assemble the parts to very tight tolerances.
As there's so much angled stuff, it would be essential to build from CAD plans and preferably as a CAD user, so that you could print off special drawings or full size templates to get the details right.
The alternative is that you build a prototype or two to iron out the bugs and get things to fit right (which I'm sure A-liner did), but I'm guessing there wouldn't be many home-build takers for that approach?
Andrew
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