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Thread: 7x4 box trailer walls
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16th April 2009, 07:52 PM #1Novice
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7x4 box trailer walls
Hi all.... Im a newbie here & let me start by saying this is a great forum with lots of info
I recently purchased a 7x4 trailer with no top... its basically a bike trailer that I want to turn into a box trailer.
Ive been reading some of the other posts about whats recommended for the floor. So far my options are chequer plate, cypress pine flooring, vinyl flooring - are there any other methods that havent been mentioned yet that work well - Im looking for something harwearing thats not going to break the bank?
What suggestions do people have to make the walls... my first idea is to build a frame out of tube steel & rivet/screw 2/3mm gal sheets to it - any advice would be welcome
billy
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16th April 2009 07:52 PM # ADSGoogle Adsense Advertisement
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16th April 2009, 09:18 PM #2
Billy.
Firstly,
The decision for the floor mainly comes down to what you're carrying in the trailer. A load of dirt or gravel that requires shoveling out can badly scratch or damage anything other than a steel/aluminium floor. And checker plate is a pain to scrape/sweep out.
If you're east of the CBD, go and see Melbourne Trailers, they have ready made, folded sides off the shelf. By the time you muck around with building a frame and cladding it, it would probably work out cheaper and less time consuming to get the prefolded sides and tailgates.Too many projects, so little time, even less money!Are you a registered member? Why not? click here to register. It's free and only takes 37 seconds! Doing work around the home? Wander over to our sister site, Renovate Forum, for all your renovation queries.
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24th April 2009, 04:11 PM #3Novice
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thanx for the info Yonnee
Ive decided to go with smooth plate for the floor & ordered the walls/tailgate from Melbourne Trailers (who were extremely helpful btw)
It was mentioned that it would be easier to put the floor in first then sit the walls on top... I was thinking long term - when it comes to replace the floor it would be easier to just cut it out rather than having to remove the walls first as they'd be sitting on the floor
Would it be better to put the floor in first, or the walls then cut/weld the floor to suit?
Any tips or comments appreciated,
billy
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24th April 2009, 10:38 PM #4
I'm wondering who gave you that info? They've obviously never had to remove a rusty trailer floor.
The normal practice is to assemble the frame, attach the uprights in each corner, then fit the sides, then the floor.
A tip for you;
Get yourself a tin of bitumen paint, and coat any surface of the chassis, the floor and the sides that get hidden once welded in place. Spending a little time and some cash doing this now will substatially increase the life of the floor and sides of the trailer. Usually the first place a trailer will rust out is where there is no paint, but moisture can still reach.
And if you really want to get fussy, fill the gaps of the joins with paintable caulking, and you'll increase the life of the trailer even more.
Yonnee.Too many projects, so little time, even less money!Are you a registered member? Why not? click here to register. It's free and only takes 37 seconds! Doing work around the home? Wander over to our sister site, Renovate Forum, for all your renovation queries.
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25th April 2009, 04:11 AM #5
I built my trailer 9 years ago now. It has a 15mm exterior ply floor, glued to the framing with sikaflex. It gets a coat of deck oil once or twice a year. It sits out in the tropical weather with 2m+ of rain a year and sunlight so fierce that the UV will burn your skin in a few minutes. I thought I'd be replacing the floor every 4 years or so but I'm still on the first one. This trailer gets constant trade use, often getting sand/gravel premix in it plus a mixer and being used for mixing concrete. The ply is getting a bit ratty near the tail gate but isn't lifting up in large splinters yet. I think it's worth considering a ply floor.
Mick"If you need a machine today and don't buy it,
tomorrow you will have paid for it and not have it."
- Henry Ford 1938
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25th April 2009, 11:06 AM #6
I've got no problem with a ply floor, however, you'd have to be fairly vigilant about keeping it oiled, as you have, as well as storing the trailer so that water did not sit in it. If neglected, a timber floor would deteriorate far quicker than a steel floor.
Too many projects, so little time, even less money!Are you a registered member? Why not? click here to register. It's free and only takes 37 seconds! Doing work around the home? Wander over to our sister site, Renovate Forum, for all your renovation queries.
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26th April 2009, 02:33 AM #7Novice
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thankyou both for the tips/info Mick & Yonnee
..... thats what I was thinking... Im new to building/modifying trailers & they seemed to know what they were talking about
yes... Ill definitely do that to the underside & bottom of floor
excellent idea... also keeps all the muck & little bits of dirt out if the joins
nice idea... I might get some ply to get me going until ready to do the steel - at least that way I can start using the thing
cant wait to get started,
billy ;-)Last edited by Yonnee; 27th April 2009 at 10:40 PM. Reason: Duplicate entry.
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27th April 2009, 03:24 PM #8Novice
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Originally Posted by yonnee
what are the uprights made out of.... just 35x35x3mm angle iron or something like that?
billyLast edited by Yonnee; 27th April 2009 at 10:41 PM. Reason: Fixed as requested.
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27th April 2009, 03:29 PM #9Old Chippy
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Rather than ply I've used 16mm formply in my trailer. I screw from underneath so the surface has no raised bit or holes for water to get in and seal around the edges. Formply is fully waterproof, surfaces are laminated and take quite a bit of abuse with sand, gravel and assorted other loads such as mixed rubble, green waste etc. being removed using shovels rakes and forks. a 2400x1200 sheet is around $70 to $90 (can be dearer!). I've used the red stripe, but either would do. Slightly heavier than checker plate, but does not bend or warp is resilient to loads being dropped in from bit of height and wears well IMO. Like all floors it will not like wet organic matter sitting in it for very long or water around edges in pools. I've tried plain steel, steel checkerplate and aluminium checkerplate and the formply is best for my mixed uses.
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27th April 2009, 10:45 PM #10Too many projects, so little time, even less money!Are you a registered member? Why not? click here to register. It's free and only takes 37 seconds! Doing work around the home? Wander over to our sister site, Renovate Forum, for all your renovation queries.
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