Interesting build. Thanks for the details.
How will you attach the camper box to the flatbed?
Six tiny bolts as @DirtWhiskey said
Interesting build. Thanks for the details.
How will you attach the camper box to the flatbed?
It wasn't engineered to begin with, though... and does not resemble any spring mounted system I've seen...
What were the reasons? Sorry if you mentioned it, I looked and didn't see anything.
It appears that your springs are very lightly loaded as it sits? As configured they will only pull down on the flatbed as it tries to move upward (relative to the frame) from twisting. When they bottom out, then you will get upward support at that point. Otherwise upward support is only where it rests near the midpoint of the frame. But that issue can be fixed easily by providing support at the corners as well.
The other obvious potential issue is the spring rate. I looked up the springs you are using and they say "3000 psi"... but that isn't a spring rating. If what they really mean is 3,000 lb/in then that means it will impart 3,000 lbs of force with a mere 1" of movement. I'm pretty certain that is *way* too stiff for your application. But you should be able to buy weaker springs easily enough. Plenty of options here: https://www.mcmaster.com/compression-springs/compression-springs-7/
Reasons I chose to avoid a 3-point include...
I was think of using the same flatbed you have, and it's not complicated. Instead of the front spring mounts you have hard mounts to the frame, and in the back you'll need some crossmembers (spanning the frame rails) with a pivot in the center.
But hopefully your spring mounts will work well with some modifications.
That seems like a decent approach. What do you do for the rearmost of the flatbed-to-frame connection?
Interesting build. Thanks for the details.
How will you attach the camper box to the flatbed?
Also, approximately how much does the Total Composites box weigh?
Thanks.
Honestly, no idea. A similar build was around 1900lbs, but that included a steel, non-articulating subframe with a giant commercial real door. Hopefully mine will be lighter. ?
Even my OMGITSMADEOUTWOOD!!!! shell weighed in at less than 1000lbs
... will check my files tomorrow when I’m back in the office to see what our engineers estimated originally.
This guy just weighed his and he's getting ~2,000 lb for the box: https://expeditionportal.com/forum/...mper-build-thread.213614/page-38#post-2845126
Doesn't seem right... I expected it to weigh half that. Mine (10' long floor with a cabover) is not wimpy at all and should be <1,000 lb with frame mounting hardware. The walls and roof are ~1.5 lb/sq ft x 340 sq ft, and the floor/base is ~2.5 lb/sq ft x 70 sq ft. That's 685 lb total, leaving 300 lb for reinforcements.
Ya, I probably will...Hey RRuff will you have a build thread? Just learning the the magic of hand laid glass. Very interested.
A composite camper is very stiff. Any vehicle flex that gets passed through to the camper can cause it to crack. Spring mounting the camper, either through a subframe or this method here, allows the camper to move independently of the chassis, hopefully improving its longevity.