by Yota Bill » Sun Mar 13, 2011 3:20 pm
you could try not overbuilding the frame with such heavy steel. 2"x2"x1/4" wall is pretty heavy stuff for a 6'x10' trailer. How much weight do you plan on putting on it anyway?
Just for example, I built a 7' wide by 14'6" trailer using 2"x1"x3/16" box steel (standing upright) as the main frame, with a deck frame made of 2"x2"x1/8" angle steel (outer perimeter and crossmembers) and 1.5"x1.5"x1/8" angle steel (interior rails), and once it was complete, except for the deck or any wood, it weighed 480 lbs. Thats a savings of 200 lbs, but also 9 inches wider and 4 & 1/2 feet longer.
I calculated what it could safely hold, but I'm not an engineer, and may have done the math wrong somehow, so I wont bother saying what number I came up with for a failure weight rating ( I think I did do something wrong, but its close enough for me). I can safely say it will hold over 2k lbs, and have had a total weight (including trailer) at about 3k from Oklahoma to Michigan, with no concerns (OK, at least no problems..I was concerned, obviously, but more for the tow vehicle). I've had similar weights on it for much more local trips, and there are no signs of stress or any potential failure. Since the camper I plan to build on it is expected to be at about 1400 lbs fully finished and loaded (figured on the heavy side, will actually be a couple hundred under that) it is more then sufficent, and has quite a safety margin as well.
Also, since cost is a concern for anyone, I also spent right around $600 total to buy all new steel, lights and wiring, hitch, suspension parts (excluding axle, springs, and tires) tounge hitch, welding wire, etc. To build something similar from aluminum would cost roughly twice as much.