sleepercatcher wrote:The trailer is not a standy. I had one more idea about mounting joist hangers on the inside rail with stainless steel bolts and then supporting the floor with 2 x 4's but wondered if the joist hangers would rust. If joist hangers are galvanized, I also wondered about a reaction between the galvanized and stainless steel metal.
OK, the joist hangers probably wouldn’t rust, but you can’t practically weld them, the zinc (I think it is) galvanized coating welds like crap and is toxic (OK it can be welded and I might have done it in an emergency in the past but I wouldn’t do it again). You might could bolt them, but the 2x4s are kind of heavy anyway; so, before anybody gets their panties in a wad let’s consider the problem a bit. First, it would be nice to have a pic so we might help conjure up a bit more helpful solution and as stated earlier you may not really have much of a problem. Trough a mattress on there and see how it actually works. If the deflection/feel is still too squirrely for you, then you can decide on a course of action.
Without looking at you frame it’s a little difficult, but square corner brackets in mild steel are easy enough to make in a vice with a hammer, or just cut off a piece of angle to make a bracket. Brackets should always have 2 fasteners per leg whether they are drilled horizontally (short height, long width bracket) in the bracket or vertically (tall skinny bracket). If the brackets are welded then it doesn’t matter. Anyway, you could put a couple of 1x2s or even 2x2s in the fore/aft direction using some brackets in-between the cross members (I’m assuming that you have cross members closer than the 4 or 5 foot width). Whatever stiffeners you can put on there, they should span the shortest dimension is order to be the most effective. If you really can’t get any stiffeners in there because of your frame, then the extra sheet of plywood is not so heavy and is about as easy to install as anything (assuming that the deflection after the mattress test is still bugging you).
sleepercatcher wrote:The question about the standy brings up another question that I've wondered about. For a 4' x 8' trailer, the perfect height for balance and appearance appears to be 48". Does anyone have any height recommendations for a 5' x 10' trailer?SC
Though some have made a different (taller) profile with the 10 foot length, most of them still have 4 foot width do to material availability (the less special sheets of plywood you need the better off you are). Either way, I’m pretty sure, though the tears can be relatively attractive we are unlikely hitting some ‘golden ratio’ with very many of the height/width combos. A 4 foot height would require a length of 6 foot 5 inches to be ‘golden’ – Maybe Roly’s half Nelson?