Ageless
Unless you are planning extreme forming; the H16 would work fine as a skin
laoutdoorsman wrote:somebody correct me if im wrong...but 5000 series aluminum is marine grade....not needed for a trailer roof...
Ageless wrote:For aircraft apps; 5052 was used for shims/spacers. Structural was 2024, 6061, 7075.
Used other alloys in tooling only
kennyrayandersen wrote:laoutdoorsman wrote:somebody correct me if im wrong...but 5000 series aluminum is marine grade....not needed for a trailer roof...
I’d be happy to. The series 1xxx, 2xxx, 3xxx, 4xxx, 5xxx, 6xxx, and 7xxx, have nothing to do whether or not the alloy is suitable for any given application such as ‘marine’, ‘outdoor’, etc., but rather refers the alloy family. Within that family the various other sub alloys and heat treats vary the properties of strength, workability, corrosion resistance etc. Even among a single family the corrosion resistance, for instance, could vary dramatically.
The 3XXX alloys are not so structural, but form easily (if I remember correctly – they don’t even show up in the Mil-handbook, so we don’t use them for ‘structural’ applications, and by that I mean a primary load carrying member. The 5XXX series has better strength properties, and can generally be bought in one of your larger cities. It is considered a low-grade structural material. It used structurally in home-built cars etc.
Having said that, you aren’t using the aluminum as a structural alloy (the top of the truck isn’t so much either (long story – you don’t want to hear it)). So for a teardrop, it doesn’t really matter much. .04 should be plenty thick for covering a teardrop – they use .04 – 05 inch thick for load carrying panels on race cars etc.
laoutdoorsman
somebody correct me if im wrong...but 5000 series aluminum is marine grade....not needed for a trailer roof...
kennyrayandersen
I’d be happy to. The series 1xxx, 2xxx, 3xxx, 4xxx, 5xxx, 6xxx, and 7xxx, have nothing to do whether or not the alloy is suitable for any given application such as ‘marine’, ‘outdoor’, etc., but rather refers the alloy family. Within that family the various other sub alloys and heat treats vary the properties of strength, workability, corrosion resistance etc. Even among a single family the corrosion resistance, for instance, could vary dramatically.
laoutdoorsman
hmmm...well, then i wonder why all the aluminum boat builders use and insist that 5000 series alum is the only plate/sheet to use....BUT....its irrelevant to this post topic....so....
Mike Angeles
I used the 102" wide .40 from a Trailer Repair place. About 11.00 a ft if I remember. unwieldy to transport and work with. DO be on hand as its cut off the roll as to safeguard as best you can.
I used the 102" wide .40 from a Trailer Repair place. About 11.00 a ft if I remember. unwieldy to transport and work with. DO be on hand as its cut off the roll as to safeguard as best you can.
I'm curious. How does one straighten aluminum at a home shop to lay flat after it's been shipped and stored in a roll?
alanv73 wrote:Let me throw this out there... I'm building a TD that's like the Cubby, the roof will have no plywood underneath it, only the spars and the insulation.
From all I've read so far, I'm getting the impression that the aluminum skin provides much of the rigidity of the trailer with this type of design.
Now we've just established that the 3003H16 aluminum has less structural strength than the 5052H32 aluminum. Does this mean if I use the 3003H16 that I could run into problems in the future with the skin tearing around the screws/trim pieces?
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