by len19070 » Sat Aug 22, 2009 9:51 pm
Actually the first thing I ever saw that resembled a teardrop was while I was camping with my parents in the late 50's.
Someone had chopped the front end off of a 49-50 Chevy and made it into a trailer. Open the doors to the car and there was a bed and the trunk was a galley.
But it really didn't sink in until much later.
This is an excerpt from my Geosites page;
About the Builder
One day in junior high school I was wasting a study hall in the library thumbing through an old Popular Mechanix magazine when I saw my first teardrop. As a life long camper, this was the coolest camping thing I had ever seen. The bell rang, study hall was over, and I put the magazine back, never to be found again.
Then in the mid 80’s KOA was celebrating its 25th or 30th anniversary, the year didn’t matter. What did matter was they were having a contest with the first prize being a “Mac-Built Teardrop and a 46 Ford”.
After being reminded about teardrops again via the KOA ad, I started making drawings, looking up teardrop info and figuring out how build one. Years before having the Internet.
Now at this point I should point out that I am the son of a master carpenter who owned a complete wood shop. I was a carpenter, and my brother was a carpenter as well. My brother and I built all kinds of things in that shop. Boats, go-karts, mini-bikes, ice boats, motorcycles, motorcycles out of cars, hang gliders, VW powered air boats, we once were in the Guinness World Book of Records for switching the engines from two VW’s into the opposite VW, in 22 minuets, and on, and on. Dad once said of his two boys “the only thing my son’s haven’t tried to built is a Submarine”. Which was a bad thing to suggest to us, my brother and I almost drowned in that thing.
I built my first teardrop in 1988. *Since then I have built over 30 teardrop trailers, the majority after 1996, and a dozen or so full size trailers.
Bla Bla Bla....Yaddy yaddy yah,
I now, and for the past 20 years, work in the RV industry. I am currently the Senior Technician at a major national RV facility in Bridgeport, NJ. I hold a Master RVIA Certificate as well as many other certificates. I have been called upon many times to solve reoccurring problems within the industry and once I have found a solution, I have been sent to other locations to teach others.
In 2000 I met the founder of TearJerkers Teardrop Trailer Club. By the next year I was the director of the newly formed, Liberty Bell Chapter. I to this day hold that position. The Liberty Bell Chapter of TearJerkers is possibly the largest, but definitely the most active chapter in the TearJerkers Organization.
All this experience, knowledge and skill converged into something I really LOVE.
Building Teardrop Trailers.
Happy Trails
Len
* since this was written the number has gone up over 50