Getting ready to buy steel in the next week our two and wanted to to run my ideas past those with experience.
I am planning on building a 5'-6" wide x 10' long x 4' tall Jim Dandy shaped tear. I am not planning to build a galley on it. the build is centered around a queen size bed and having room to store stuff between the end of the bed and the front wall, as well as being to enter the trailer without climbing directly into bed. I also pln to run a torflex axle, size to be determined after I figure out weights.I plan to use 2x2 above the frame with plywood on top for the floor and sandwich walls with 3/4 insulation between 3/8 outter ply (thinnest 4 x 10 sheet I can get locally) and 1/8 inside panel.
My initial thought was to go with 2x2 tube for the frame, but after reading, looking at commercially built trailers and thinking about the rigid box, I am leaning towards 2x2x1/8 angle iron. I would size the tongue for the anticipated weight, likely using a 2.5 or 3" tube. I was thinking of running cross members at a 2' spacing. I would use a piece of angle to box out the frame rails at the axle location to stiffen the axle support.
Does this seem reasonable?
I am thinking it is sufficient, and not overbuilt. My biggest question is the cross members at the front and at the end of the tongue, since these two take the tongue load. I can see the front bring ok since it will push up into the box, but the one at the end of the tongue will want to bend down. Should I double up this one, bolt it to the floor or consider a larger member for the end of tongue cross member?
Thanks for any advice you can provide!
Craig[/i]