FusoFG said:
Brent,
No the camper doesn't flex outward in relation to the truck chassis during a turn.
There maybe some lean relative to the road, but the camper and chassis lean together in the same amount so there is no movement of the camper relative to the truck chassis.
Assuming the camper is rigid enough.
The camper doesn't twist relative to the truck chassis when you move around in it when parked either. It can't because at some point it's rigidly attached to the truck chassis. Either at one end in a 3 point system or in the middle using Unimog's 4 point system.
Movement between the camper and truck should only occur when the front axle twists in relation to the rear axle and causes the truck chassis to twist. That's part of the articulation that keeps the wheels on the ground on uneven surfaces.
I think any 'movement' reported by owners when the truck chassis isn't twisting is caused by a) cab movement - the FG cab is flexibily mounted, b) suspension movement, or c) flex in the camper itself.
It sounds like you are describing the kind of air ride suspension system used on 18 wheelers to mount the cab and sleeper box. Especially the ones with custom 13' long sleeper boxes with bed, bathroom and kitchen.
They mount them on air bags and shocks for comfort while they drive, not to accomodate chassis flex off road. They appear to move quite a bit when you seem them hit bumps on the expressway.
I would be concerned about mounting a 4000 - 8000 pound camper using just rubber 'motor mounts' without some type of addition metal fastening system that would keep the camper connected in the event of a motor mount failure.
Good luck,
Thanks for the response Tom.
I'm affraid I am not clearly communicating my ideas - sorry for that.
The airbags I'm describing are only supplemental, distributing the load more evenly - not like a truck air spring sys.
The engine mounts I am referring to are rated up to 4500lbs (EACH) depending on the model (I am looking at the series 22000) and they are fail safe, meaning they have a bolt that runs through them. Even if the polymer was to fail, the bolt would not allow a disconnect. If you look at Rob Gray's rig it's one of the biggest/heaviest I've seen, he got by fine with just 3 of these mounts - years of use.
Some of these rubber mounting products are rated to 10,000lbs, so its only a matter of applying them correctly. From my experience, I am more concerned with metal to metal connections on vibrating systems. Vibration and shock are killers. We develop DC Contactors for aerospace and ground vehicles (Bradley), and the first qualification test they want to do is shock and vibration. I'm sure I could get by without the shock mounts, but I believe they are a good benefit.
I hope to start cutting material in a week or two - I'll keep you posted on the progress.