Rather than shooting for a particular weight, I'm trying to avoid the inevitable weight creep right from the start. I'm looking at everything to see if I can make it lighter and still keep it as strong as it needs to be.
If it's harder to do, then so be it....IF it will work.
For example - I don't see the need on my build for a 3/4 ply floor that's going to be under cabinets mostly...that's why I'm addressing the structural issues in the framing.
I'm going to have my wife and I, a shepherd and a retriever, a cooler of food and a cooler of beer in a 2wd 4 cyl Ranger....and a 9' boat to top it off.
With the trolling motor, trailer batteries, boat batteries, & a water tank in the trailer behind it, every pound counts.
I know the next question but I can't really justify getting a bigger truck just to pull it with when my Ranger covers everything else I need and is better on gas.
That's for the next build after we use this one enough to justify replacing the truck. Besides, I only have one parking spot.
I agree that the trailer will bounce more if it's light, but it won't be light once it's loaded, that's why I need to get the layout right. I also want to make it separate from the trailer's frame (like GPW's) so it needs to be light enough to do that empty. Then I'll have to wheel it around back on a dolly (the 'one parking spot thing' again)
So yeah eagles, that would be me that's thinking about a foam sandwich floor.
Well, as much foam as I can get away with anyway....
