As a teardrop builder and a recently refurbished vintage travel trailer owner, I can tell you that it probably would be quicker and cheaper to do the repairs required on the Standy trailer you mentioned. It all depends on what your style of camping is. Wow, only a hundred bucks for a whole stand-up trailer, you can't beat that, you would spend much more for just wheels and tires for a newly constructed teardrop trailer. It is kind of nice to stand inside and change clothes, use a porta-potty and cook inside if it rains. It's up to you. Oh yes, welcome to the forum.
My 10 ft Kenskill standy was thrashed inside, and I just glued new plywood to the old sides and ceiling. Works fine for me.
Roly
