glassice wrote:Why use wood we use no wood and works great ? Are trailer are use as rental units in Costa Rica few roads get beat to hell for over 6 years for some it rains all the time even have one bob in the sea for 10 days had to fix the tongue and a tire never park at low tide
Funny, I never thought about it but I don’t think you could sink one of these bodies made from a foam sandwich if you tried!
With regard to your question, first, I’m using less plies that you apparently are if I understand you correctly. Second – I could be over killing it a bit, but I usually err on the side of conservatism. I like the idea of being able to biscuit and screw the floor to the sides as well as the shelves to the sides. Additionally, it gives something substantial to bolt a minimalist frame to. Like I was saying earlier, stuff usually fails at the joints, not out in the field area; plus, you tend not to save much weight in the joints but over a large area (on a wing for instance, if you are able to reduce just a little thickness on the skin, there is a huge impart to the weight since the area is so large). On a teardrop, there is a lot of area that doesn’t require much strength. By putting the robustness in the joints and not in the field area, the overall weight should be less. There is more than one way to solve a problem, and as you have found out with your configuration you can fix it by adding plies. In the end, it might be lighter than I’m doing it – it would take some ciphering (as Jethro would say) to know which in the end is lighter. However, I really don’t like to load up the sandwich in tension – it’s generally not good design practice; so, if you close each particular panel out in wood, you can get a really good attachment joint. Again, both will work, it’s just my preference. You could probably use plywood or other commercially available inserts to attach the body to the frame, or ramp the foam down to nothing and add extra plies to that solid laminate area, but the other thing I’m trying to do is to make is simple and easy to manufacture in a non-production (garage) environment – simple rectangular panels closed out with 1X1 or 1X2 fir and skinned over with glass is about as easy and simpler as it gets and no tooling other than a flat bench is required.
