To finalize the deal though, I used aluminum angle with 1/2" screws going into the 3/4" wall, and 3/4" screws going into the thicker floor. Look at the bottom of the pic:
Mauleskinner wrote:alanv73 wrote:Are you saying you didn't even use screws at all to hold the sides on?
That's what I'm saying...but then...kennyrayandersen wrote:It would certainly keep the walls from separating from the floor (which has been a problem from time to time it seems).
maybe i oughter
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Any links to threads discussing this?
alanv73 wrote:How does this look? If I use 1/4-20 or 5/16-18 carriage bolts, they have a tension strength of something like 60,000PSI, and shear strength 60% of that. Three bolts per side should do it.
kennyrayandersen wrote:I think it boils down to whether you used enough fasteners/glue in the first place. The problem was with a commercially produced teardrop, and it was noted that there was a scarcity of fasteners in the joint. If you screw and glue/biscuit or glue/dowel, I’m guessing you aren’t going to have any problems whether you bolt the side wall to the frame anyway, I was just noting that it would definitely eliminate this failure mode and it does make an incredibly strong joint.
alanv73 wrote:To make me even more paranoid, I was reading a thread about adding shock absorbers to a TD. Not that I'm considering it for myself, but I just thought it was interesting. There I read some horror stories about the amount of 'bouncing' these TD's do on bumpy roads. All I could picture were those carriage bolts shearing off on my way to my first camp-out.
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