dh wrote:Couldn't you build the ''practice'' tear out of cardboard to get the measurements and reinforcement locations?
Call me crazy, but I want to use my (tiny) travel trailer a few times, see what I did wrong, what I need to add, subtract, or modify. Before pony'ing up the big money for the honeycomb panels. I don't even know where I'm putting windows/vents yet!
For me, I am building something that is assembled before use, and disassembles after use. Something that will fit in a two-car garage with two cars in it. So it will be bolt-n-fold. Kind of like a hard-sided tent trailer, but since it is 4x8, not quite so spacious
I got quotes for the panels from
Teklam and
Paneltec. I looked around for overstock and "stock" panels (paneltec used to advertise them on their web site), but couldn't find anything. Everyone I talked to just builds the panels one-off to customers' specs. They would all love a CAD drawing to make their life easier (and more accurate) when doing any shapes other than rectangles (cutouts, holes, etc).
Anyone who lives in an aerospace manufacturing center (southern cali, SF Bay, wichita? CT?) can probably find interesting scrap.
Here in Las Vegas, nothing is available. I didn't want to over-engineer ($$$$$$) with the honeycomb; I am thinking now that my initial ideas were way way over-burly. I initially tried estimating using beam deflection formulas, but not eveyone publishes modulus of elasticity/moment of inertia, especially for the more exotic honeycomb materials and facing sheets. I used the calculators here at
Engineer's Edge
Now my calculations go like this: build in wood as light as possible, see how it turns out. If it's all good, then the wood thickness will be the maximum thickness of honeycomb I'll need.
When I make mistakes in wood (too short/too long) it is relatively cheaper and easier to remedy than a breathtakingly expensive bit of honeycomb panel.