- Floor length: 8ft
- Floor width: 5ft
- Inside height: 5ft
- Overall length 11ft-8in
- Overall height: 6ft-6in
- Weight: 750 pounds (estimated)
- Suspension: 2000# leaf springs and axle
- Floor: BC fir plywood
- Walls: composite material sandwich (epoxy-fibreglass and polystyrene foam)
- Roof: Ultra high molecular weight polyethylene plastic (UHMW-PE plastic)
- Frame: all welded steel
- Color: green because it’s cool!
Friday, 27 January 2012
My teardrop trailer specs
Future of my teardrop trailer
Future of my teardrop trailer
Actual prototype design (8ft long x 5ft high x 5ft wide) |
Future prototype design (9ft long x 5ft high x 5ft wide) |
- Some fine tuning will probably be needed next summer. I’ll see after extended use of it.
- I am planning to test it a lot next summer. I’m willing to lend it to many people to test it even more throughout the summer.
- I would like to build a second prototype. It would be a foot longer, same height and walls would be made of another material, easier to work with then fibreglass and foam.
- I am considering a lot of design modifications: a rear hatch, a second door, lightning system, electric ventilation, storage bin, etc... But I want to keep my design simple as possible.
- I like to receive suggestions and comments when people come to talk to me when I park at Walmart. It is a great source of inspiration and motivation.
Wednesday, 25 January 2012
Construction of my teardrop trailer, the final touch
Last step:
üI have put everything back in place.
üI made sure there was no water leaks by filling each joint using butyl tape and silicon. (there was many leak at first, but it ended well!)
üI added a 4” queen size foam mattress for more comfort.
üCeiling have been finished with loan sheets.
Construction of my teardrop trailer, some accesories
5th, add some useful features:
- A door may be useful to get in and out of the camper.
- A roof vent is also a must to keep air cool and of good quality.
- Jack stand prevent the trailer from bouncing and rolling during the night.
- An electric heater (not shown) also been added for surviving cold nights (remember I’m from Québec, far from Florida!).
door construction |
door handle |
Construction of my teardrop trailer, the roof
4th, cover it with a roof:
üA roof made of ¼ inches UHMW plastic sheet screwed to the walls edge with stainless screws.
üUHMW can resist to cold temperature.
üVery elastic, so it take back its shape after an impact, won’t kink like aluminum.
üHave a better weight to deformation resistance then plywood.
ü
Construction of my teardrop trailer, walls and trailer assembly
Construction of my teardrop trailer, the walls
üSecond, the walls:
üLightweight (much lighter then plywood walls usually used in DIY teardrop).
üVery rigid.
üWon't rotten or delaminate in case of water infiltration
ü
Friday, 20 January 2012
Construction of my teardrop trailer
üFirst, I had to design and to build a trailer.
ü5 x 8 feet
üMade of steel square tubing and angles
üJack stand in each corner
ü8” steel wheels
ü2000 # axle and leaf springs
ü... Painted aluminum color so it look lighter...
by: jean.rene.rodrigue@gmail.com
by: jean.rene.rodrigue@gmail.com
Why I choose to build my teardrop trailer
Over the time I have seen many homemade teardrop trailers on the Internet and they seem to be the best alternative to my old van.
Teardrop trailer seems to be the best RV to fulfill my needs:
üCheap to travel with/Easy on gas.
üCheap to buy/fabricate.
üSmall enough to go on any remote or downtown roads.
üLight enough to be pulled with my 4 cylinders car.
üLarge enough to accommodate 2.
üHas a head turning look.
üDryer and warmer camping experience then camping with a tent.
üSet up time of a few seconds comparing to tens of minutes with a tent trailer.
by: jean.rene.rodrigue@gmail.com
by: jean.rene.rodrigue@gmail.com
Thursday, 19 January 2012
Construction of my Teardrop Trailer
Why I choose to build my teardrop trailer
Still looking for a cheaper way of RV’ing:
üWith a friend, I managed to pimp a 98 Ford Windstar to turn it into some kind of RV.
üIt did the ride to California from Québec without problems.
A 10 years old van was probably going to cost a lot of $$$ in maintenance fees in the years to come added to registration and insurances fees.
Why I choose to build my teardrop trailer
Looking for a cheap way to travel
üI was willing to travel to the west coast (I live in Québec) in a small RV such as a VW Westfalia.
üUsed Westfalia and similar RV are overpriced and I couldn’t afford one in good shape.
Conclusion: it’s not a cheap solution at all !! Westfalia = $$$
Wednesday, 18 January 2012
My teardrop trailer
My teardrop trailer
Why I choose to build one, my design, the construction and the use of my teardrop trailer.
www.teardroptrailerkit.com
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