irked?Two inch square tube. Base is made from a irked 2 x 12 channel that ties the floor into the walls. Floor and roof are 1/8” aluminum-all welded. Bare frame weighs about 890 pounds.
irked?Two inch square tube. Base is made from a irked 2 x 12 channel that ties the floor into the walls. Floor and roof are 1/8” aluminum-all welded. Bare frame weighs about 890 pounds.
Weight is for sure an issue with steel, but you may be able to go to a lighter material using steel as a fairly strong structure can be created using gusseting, dimple dies, etc. to reinforce the structural elements of your frame, so the weight changes between steel and aluminum may not be as significant. Apart from weight, it seems like your main concern with the thinner-walled steel was corrosion, but I don't think you'll need to worry about internal corrosion -- you can always chemically treat the interior of the box sections to prevent rust (I strongly recommend Fluid Film -- in an enclosed frame it should last forever and virtually eliminate the risk of rust). I've done a few projects that way -- paint on the outside, FF on the inside -- and they are like new.
Mild steel, if built correctly with attention to detail and proper rain water, road spray, drainage design considerations, rust will never be an issue. The issue is allowing water to drain once it finds its way in....... which it alway will, plus using insulation not affected by water infiltration
If you do keep considering aluminium, rather than the huge challenge that welding poses have a look at Huck bolts (generic term lock bolts) Famously strong and very resistant to vibration.
Foam core panels with skins of fiberglass, aluminum, or wood (on the inside) are not that hard to do, and provide good strength, stiffness, and insulation. There are many examples of that on ExPo that have been successful.
The best solution is frameless using fibreglass/polyurethane foam/fibreglass sandwich panel.
No cold connections, no high stress points, lighter, stronger, water proof, better insulation, minimal tools and skills. And it is easy
No competition.
Personally, I prefer wood. Even though nobody else does.
But when compared to anything metal, it is superior in one way that I could never overlook... thermal performance.
It is simply amazing just how well this camper performs in ANY weather.
And at the end of the day, that is job #1 for a camper. To protect its occupants from weather.
8 years on the road now, and going stronger and looking better than ever
Thermal bridging would be a MAJOR issue with having the inner and outer skins both attached directly to a metal frame. No matter how much insulation you put in the voids, the heat or cold would be transmitted directly to the interior, making heating and cooling MUCH harder...
Are you dead set on a welded metal frame and sheet metal panels? Even if you will always be in mild weather, insulation is a good thing.
Diagonal bracing should always run corner to corner of a wall or panel (spaces between verticals). If you diagonal brace the panel at one end of the wall diagonal bracing the pane at the other end of the wall is not necessary.
The cross members for the floor and roof should be continuous and the longitudinals should be intercostal.
TiG welding produces 2X the distortion vs. MIG welding.
Sorry, I should have explained. Yes, there will be insulation foam board bonded onto the outer metal skin. To combat thermal bridging from the metal frame, non-corner members will be half the width of the corner members. Thus, I can overlay a thinner section of foam insulation over these, so no metal parts fully bridge from outside to inside. I hope the cross-sectional view below illustrates what I mean. Any thoughts on constructing the walls like this?
View attachment 639462
I’ll read more into the viability of custom bonding my own composite panels, as perhaps that would work out to a similar cost as a welded and riveted frame.
In my case, need to support 600-800lbs of gear on a roof rack.There is no need for external metal structure on a composite panel build.
That is a different case. A composite camper does not require any external strengthening. Our truck carried 500 lbs of spare leaf springs on the roof for 23 years on a steel roof rack that was only supported by the box corners. One of the first things I removed. All that weight up high is crazy.In my case, need to support 600-800lbs of gear on a roof rack.
Hence the idea of a fully external lifting frame
with an insulated "living pod" that sits within,
the top half pulled upwards lifted by the rack above
whole pod can be removed so the trailer has working utility when not using it for camping.
formed!irked?
Those countersunk screws will transfer cold to interior. They can act as a bridge. Metal has no insulation value and will transfer cold. When the cold hits the head of screw where it will be warmer, condensation can result. You could try using fiberglass fasteners (Mcmaster Carr). If you use foil face insulation, you could apply glue before the plywood. An alternate to plywood (heavy) would be KAPATECH. Its a 3/8" thick foam board with thin aluminum face on either side. Glue to Foil insulation-you get more insulation value. You could then use fiberglass screws to further secure it.Thanks for all the responses everyone. Some really good info.
I like the links to similar truck camper builds; I’ll definitely check those out in detail.
Good points, thanks. Based on what everyone has been saying here, I’m leaning towards going with mild steel for the frame, as it will just make my life easier especially with welding. Coat the inside with linseed oil or Fluid Film as suggested, and I could put a small tapped hole with a screw at the bottom of each tube member for occasional draining if needed.
As people have mentioned, I’ve have probably gone overkill with the frame structure, so I’ll look into removing some of the members to save a bit of weight, especially if I am going with steel.
From a quick search of Huck bolts, it doesn’t look possible to use these when you don’t have access to the back of the part you are bolting, e.g. half way down an 8ft square tube. Is this the case? In a similar vein, I suppose I could use blind rivnuts/nutserts, but I think they have a tendency to come loose and spin when experiencing a lot of vibration.
The main reason I’m choosing not to go with composite foam-core panels is because they are significantly more expensive than a welded frame and riveted construction, and I am working to a fairly tight budget. No doubt though, composite panels have benefits such as lighter weight and less thermal bridging.
My estimates for cost for a camper box constructed of a welded box section frame ($500-1100, depending on material) with 1mm aluminium sheet metal panels ($1200) externally coated in bedliner ($1000), held onto the frame with rivets ($300), and with XPS foam insulation ($500), gives a total of $3500-4000 for a complete camper shell.
On the other hand, pre-cut composite panel kits as linked by REF are ~$10,000. Even if I bought and cut my own ready-made composite panels, I’m looking at least $7000+ (at least based on the readily available online prices I could find; maybe there are cheaper options but I’d have to dig deeper) and I would then still need to make an outer framework to hold it all together. If I could find a supplier of composite panels that works out cheaper then I may strongly consider that method.
I’ll read more into the viability of custom bonding my own composite panels, as perhaps that would work out to a similar cost as a welded and riveted frame.
Very cool that you made that all out of wood. What is the outside coated with, fiberglass?
Sorry, I should have explained. Yes, there will be insulation foam board bonded onto the outer metal skin. To combat thermal bridging from the metal frame, non-corner members will be half the width of the corner members. Thus, I can overlay a thinner section of foam insulation over these, so no metal parts fully bridge from outside to inside. I hope the cross-sectional view below illustrates what I mean. Any thoughts on constructing the walls like this?
View attachment 639462
I still do not get it, could you please form a few complete sentences to explain in detail what you did and how?formed!