After my last post about my fiberglass conundrum, I became more and more discouraged from continuing with the fiberglass shell. Eventually I wrote it off all together and took it to the dump.
The trailer sat for several months with its fate unknown.
In January, I started on the idea that I would get a roof top tent. Treeline outdoors isn't far from me so I arrange to stop and and check the tents out. The day after I called and said that I would like to put a deposit down for a certain color that was coming on the next shipment. I send a message twice trying to give them my credit card number for the deposit but both times was told that they would call me when they got into the office. I never heard back from them and I stopped trying- kind of an odd way to conduct business... maybe he got a bad feeling from me??
Anyway, this gave me some time to think. For the cost of a treeline tent I could nearly finish my trailer- and at that the spark was reborn.
I decided to go with the idea of using the overhead door panels. I am staying with the original shape but I have decided to change the layout a little bit.
Instead of having doors on the sides and having a lift back hatch at the rear I decided I will have windows on the sides and a single door at the rear. Eventually the idea will be to have a slide out kitchen from beneath the bed area. At this point my main goal is to get the shell built and habitable, then works on the extras. The plan for next year is to build an aluminum frame fastened together with rivets. Wont rust and with cut a significant amount of weight off of the current trailer weight.
Overhead door panels: my shops brings in 28'-30' slab panels and cuts them down to the size that is required. Often times we will get odd sizes requested which leaves a 5'-7' panel (a width that is rarely if ever ordered) left over after cutting the longer slab up. So after the last few months, I have accumulated enough of these left over panels to build the camper- Completely
free
The panels don't have a finished edge so i had some .100 3"x3" aluminum bent for capping the entire camper
Originally I wanted the camper to be removable and I still do so I will be securing the trailer with 12 of these
We have had a brutal winter this year- way more snow than usual and it was consistently cold. Between that and working a lot, I didn't get much of a chance to work on the trailer until the last week of two.
Got all the panels cut to the size needed and glued the floor together (yesterdays teaser photo)
And pretty much brings you up to speed.
Yesterday I glued and clamped the floor and I'm giving it 2 days to cure because its still not "warm" although after our winter I'd considered this warm.
Tomorrow if I get off work at a reasonable time I will glue and clamp one of the side walls and then Sunday the other wall.
I am planning to take a few days off after the job I am on is done as I have worked every day for the last 3 weeks. Will have to do some paperwork for my corporate taxes and GST but I'm hoping to get the shell of the trailer done then too.
My door and windows are in transit and I'm hoping to have them early need week.
Super stoked to be going again on this and even more excited that I will get to use the trailer this year finally!