Nobody wrote:I mounted the rails, as suggested by the mfgr'r, in the same manner as planovet, with the wider piece on the TD, rounded side up. Bought a 30" strip then cut it in half & mounted one piece on each side of the TD using 5 screws in each 15" piece, thru the aluminum siding & the 1/4" luan outer wall with at least a couple of the screws going into the framing of the sides. The smaller rail is mounted on the end of the 3/4" birch plywood table (the 'long' flat on this piece exactly matches the thickness of the plywood). I elected to go with a hinged leg that 'locks' to the bottom of the TD side providing a level surface regardless of terrain, as long as the TD is level. Yeah, I know all that weight is suspended from the side of the TD but, I've used the table to hold a 7gal water jug (approx 58lbs) lotsa times since adding it to the TD in late 2006, with no sign of weakening or distortion of the siding or underlayment at the mounting point. Got plans to build another table to utilize the second strip on the other side of the TD but I'm all out of 3/4" birch ply & don't want to buy another whole sheet just yet.
toypusher wrote:So, I guess my way won't work then!![]()
Just because it has been for the last 4 years.
Personally I would rather not have any pressure on the part that is attached to the teardrop. If you have a problem with any type of support for your table when it is put in from the up postion then it will put pressure on the part attached to the tear and possibly damage it. If you mount it the way I did and the leg gives out then the table just falls and there is no damage to the teardrop. Just my opinion!!
Joanne wrote:mikeschn wrote:The larger part definitely mounts on the table...
When I tried it the opposite way, I had to start with the table at 30 degrees below horizontal, and it never stayed up against the wall.
so this is the way to go...
Mike...
I agree with Mike. My side table came out of another trailer and it was mounted with the narrow piece on the wall with the rounded side up. Of course the larger "hooked" piece mounts on the table edge. It's easy to put up the table in place because the "hooked" piece catches on the wall mounted piece, then the table rotates downward and into place. Works perfect.
Joanne
godskid wrote:I was hoping you would chime in (I read somewhere that you are an engineer). What about the idea of mounting it FLAT side up, so that no weight is on the trailer? My trailer is already built, and I can't add more support (nor even be positive about where the studs are) so I liked the concept of "if leg breaks, the table just dis-engages from the trailer instead of ripping the side off the trailer". I have a Physics background, tho not engineering, and I like the idea for the safety to the trailer wall.
Comment?
kennyrayandersen wrote:Yeah, OK. You could do it that way if you put the small inside track on the table and then mount the big one on trailer side with the bulb at the bottom. A bit unorthodox, but it would work. Now, keep in mind that all of these tables will have a support leg. So the moment at the trailer is not high (unless the support leg is removed, or at a severe angle). It does make the table awkward, IMO, to install as you have to start with the table down low, insert it, and then lift up to get it where you want it and then somehow get the leg in place (from the side?).
godskid wrote:
Thanks! My table is fitted with a retractable mono-pod camera leg, so it starts short and swings into place .... then you lengthen it as needed. (thanks xrover for that table & leg!) I'll give this a go.
bobhenry wrote:godskid wrote:
Thanks! My table is fitted with a retractable mono-pod camera leg, so it starts short and swings into place .... then you lengthen it as needed. (thanks xrover for that table & leg!) I'll give this a go.
Mine is a mono " leg"
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