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Jack B. wrote:...does it work for the parts tucked under the floor for bonding? Of course underneath I would probably be using stringers that I screw and glue through the cloth.
KCStudly wrote:Jack B. wrote:...does it work for the parts tucked under the floor for bonding? Of course underneath I would probably be using stringers that I screw and glue through the cloth.
It sounds like you are planning to wrap the canvas around the wall and under the upper floor skin, and then build the floor framework under that? That would be a new approach. Do you plan on having an insulated floor with top and bottom skins, or just a top skin and open frame work underneath? If screwing threw the canvas to apply stringers I would bed the stringer in something wet and sticky (sealant, black goop, wet paint, anything to form a seal), then come back and pull the screws one at a time to add more sealant/glue/etc. into the screw hole. Don't want any chance of water getting up into the floor.
What I think has been done mostly, and what I plan to do on TPCE is to: attach the walls to the completed floor; then wrap with paint and canvas stapling canvas down under the whole floor (you could even go crazy and canvas the bottom of the floor first for extra strength and protection); then coat the bottom with your preferred sealer (more paint and/or the goop); then bolt the box to the trailer frame (perhaps using a bed of sealant on the frame members to fill voids and provide anti-skid/anti-squeak). Where the bolts go up through, I intend to seal liberally with "the mixture" or even epoxy prior to canvas and/or goop.
On another thread there was a discussion about whether one should seal all of the members and surfaces on the inside of the floor structure before gluing it together. I didn't do that based on the premise that I was using wood glue to stick wood to wood and adhesive to stick foam to wood, and I didn't want anything to interfere with those bonds; the paint, canvas, paint and sealer "should" prevent water from getting in. Extra reinforcement at corners and edges. OOMV (other opinions may vary).
My most vulnerable points will be penetrations such as the floor mounting holes, the windows and door latches, the roof vent, and of course the edges of the doors and hatch. I am struggling with the sequence for the walls in my mind. I would like to have the canvas on and wrapped around the door jambs and door frame before putting the interior wall skins on because then the inner wood skin would make a nice crisp edge holding the edges of the canvas firmly. I want to skin the inside all in one go with the wall and door shimmed together so that the door stays flat and true to the opening.
On the other hand, applying the inner wall skin (5 mm marine ply) first would add stability; whereas the canvas could pull the wall out of flat due to shrinkage. Has anyone had their wall curl up when applying canvas ‘in the flat’ before attached to the box? I am still on the fence as to whether to pre-shrink canvas or to let it shrink at install for the tension/sock effect (both seem to have been effective for others and not pre-shrinking eliminates a step).
What I will probably do is "jamb out" the door edge and door frame first with strips of canvas (same for the roof vent and other areas), build the box, then come back and apply the bulk of the canvas. I don't think I will have too much trouble flipping the box around to work in the flat if needed.
Good luck, build on, and remember... lots of pic's. We need da pics.
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