We have finished enough of the interior of our living pod camper on our 2006 Isuzu NRR 176" wheelbase 19,500 lb GVWR truck that we are ready to start the garage pod build.
Our current plans are to make the garage pod a foot shorter than the living pod (still 7 feet of headroom) and have a roof rack for kayaks and such. Thus even with the kayaks up there the overall vehicle height is still 12 feet.
In order to fit our snowmobiles into the garage pod, it needs to be nearly 11 feet long. There is some possibility of taking the skis off of the snowmobiles during transport, but would be annoying.
I plan to make the garage pod in a similar fashion to the living pod. The frame would be welded square tube steel with aluminum siding attached with Sikaflex 252. I am going to weld in a rear workbench in such a fashion that it does not need legs and the snowmobile front skis will be able to slide under it. The workbench plus front engine weight of the snowmobiles will put the center of mass of the garage pod closer to the rear axle than the actual midpoint of the garage pod.
A quick calculation of the steel for the pod and ramp door is around 620 pounds. Off the cuff the completed empty garage pod will likely be in the range of 1400 to 1700 pounds. Loaded with motorcycles and snowmobiles, plus gear, 4000 pounds.
Our current weight with camper only is 13,125 pounds with 6323 on the front axle and 6802 on the rear. The front axle is rated for 6830 and the rear for 13,660
With the fully loaded garage pod mounted and the camper loaded with gear, I estimate the front axle will be at 5865 pounds and the rear at 12060 pounds with a total vehicle weight of 17925.
So the numbers work, at least on axle loads, but there is not a lot of room for error. Upgrading to a T7500 cabover with a 12000 pound front axle rating and 26k GVWR would be nice, but at double the cost of our Isuzu NRR for similar age/miles.
I have some concern about the overhang of the garage pod. It will hang off the end of the 20 foot flatbed by 2 feet. I might be convinced to make the pod 10 feet instead of 11 feet long but that would be the minimum length and it will still overhang by a foot.
Here is a current picture of what we have so far and also a picture of the proposed garage pod:


Our current plans are to make the garage pod a foot shorter than the living pod (still 7 feet of headroom) and have a roof rack for kayaks and such. Thus even with the kayaks up there the overall vehicle height is still 12 feet.
In order to fit our snowmobiles into the garage pod, it needs to be nearly 11 feet long. There is some possibility of taking the skis off of the snowmobiles during transport, but would be annoying.
I plan to make the garage pod in a similar fashion to the living pod. The frame would be welded square tube steel with aluminum siding attached with Sikaflex 252. I am going to weld in a rear workbench in such a fashion that it does not need legs and the snowmobile front skis will be able to slide under it. The workbench plus front engine weight of the snowmobiles will put the center of mass of the garage pod closer to the rear axle than the actual midpoint of the garage pod.
A quick calculation of the steel for the pod and ramp door is around 620 pounds. Off the cuff the completed empty garage pod will likely be in the range of 1400 to 1700 pounds. Loaded with motorcycles and snowmobiles, plus gear, 4000 pounds.
Our current weight with camper only is 13,125 pounds with 6323 on the front axle and 6802 on the rear. The front axle is rated for 6830 and the rear for 13,660
With the fully loaded garage pod mounted and the camper loaded with gear, I estimate the front axle will be at 5865 pounds and the rear at 12060 pounds with a total vehicle weight of 17925.
So the numbers work, at least on axle loads, but there is not a lot of room for error. Upgrading to a T7500 cabover with a 12000 pound front axle rating and 26k GVWR would be nice, but at double the cost of our Isuzu NRR for similar age/miles.
I have some concern about the overhang of the garage pod. It will hang off the end of the 20 foot flatbed by 2 feet. I might be convinced to make the pod 10 feet instead of 11 feet long but that would be the minimum length and it will still overhang by a foot.
Here is a current picture of what we have so far and also a picture of the proposed garage pod:

