How to make a good camper shell?

Ndmker

New member
So my thoughts on a good camper shell have been changing and evolving.

First I started with a steel and aluminium frame and was eager to cover it with aluminium sheet. But I resigned because of the weight of steel, the lack of flexibility of aluminium and because of the softness and weight of aluminium sheets (aluminium doesn't bounce back so every hit by a branch leaves a dent). Oh I forgot to mention that sticking together alu sheets is not so elegant and prone to create leaks. Plus it would cost me a lot of Sikaflex. In other words a metal cage covered in alu is a dumb idea, although the easiest to make.

Then I thought about epoxy resin and carbon fiber which have a perfect weight and strength, but the cost is terrible so it is not a realistic idea. Even if I ordered carbon fiber mat from China, the amount of epoxy would still create a huge cost.

Finally my thoughts went to fiberglass. My first thought were boats, which have quite thick layer of fiberglass, have good water resistance but are terribly heavy. After some thinking I realized that a boat needs to have a thick layer of fiberglass because it hits the water with great force, so all the surface needs to be equally strong. But this is not the case with a camper shell, which is in touch with air, not water. What's more, the camper shell walls cut through the air instead of hitting water head-on, as is the case wit boats. So my next step was to think of making the camper shell with a few layers of fiberglass: like making the wall only a few millimeters thick and not 2cm. But the shell would be wobbly and prone to cracking, there would be no possibility to hang anything on the walls etc.
So I've been thinking about making some kind of ribs between fiberglass layers, because making a tubular structure gives a lot of strength. I've been looking for some good materials for ribs but couldn't find anything hi-tech.

Well, XPS (extruded polystyrene) is lightweight and good as an insert which would be sandwiched between fiberglass layers. But I am afraid that the resin might melt it and it is still too soft to put a screw in it.

Eventually my thoughts stopped on wood. Making a fiberglass shell with wooden ribs in between layers. The wood would be soaked in resin so it would mean good protection against moisture, it is flexible and doesn't crack, it it relatively lightweight. The downside is that wood seems 'medieval' to me and I am not sure if it is a good building material for such reinforcements/ribs. So this is my first question.

The second questions is how to connect together the pieces of my camper shell. For example the roof with the walls. The diagram below shows my general idea of the ribs which would be covered with fiberglass. On the right I have drawn a hypothetical connection of the roof and a wall.

Should the mating surfaces covered with gelcoat of just fiberglass and resin? I will use sikaflex 221 on the mating surfaces.
Should I use only Sikaflex all along the mating surfaces? Or maybe I should also attach some plates to the vertical surfaces and fit them with screws through fiberglass to the wooden reinforcements. My thought is that Sikaflex will distribute the forces evenly along the whole frame, whereas a few plates with screws would concentrate torsional forces in just a few places. But somehow it seems odd to have my camper walls and roof together by just some sticky goo :)

Please comment on my ideas. Maybe there are some other building materials or connection methods?

camper-shell-fix.jpg
 

trailrunner

Observer
Well, there is no reason you couldn't just fiberglass the pieces together as a solid unit. Wood is hardly medieval and when used appropriately is exceptionally strong. From my reading, usually when people build fiberglass structures they build and skin the frame with thin marine plywood. Those boats that you talk about are usually molded completely from fiberglass which is a different process and relies almost solely on the fibreglass for strength which leads to the increase in weight. this http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stitch_and_glue is a lightweight technique people use to build boats. If you search around the forum you will find some builds that successfully used fibreglass and produced a relatively lightweight structure.
 

herm

Adventurer
wood or rigid foam is used in most boats for the stringers and anyplace anything is attached to the hull. I would stick with wood ribs as they will be easy to mount things to and provide a lot of strength and are fairly light weight. you could use basswood as some boats do to decease your weight even more.
 

Treenail

Adventurer
If you're going through all of the time and effort to use 'glass why use wood for ribs?

Wood is problematic in camper construction. Even the best construction methods can't isolate it from water. Water+wood=decay.

I'm an arborist and a woodworker, I know a little bit about wood decay.

Use foam blocks for ribs. You can make a foam hot cutter easily. Or use a sharp knife.

Thick wall plastic tubing can be used to form 'studs' too. Designed correctly you'll have plenty of strength in the 'glass/plastic to support interior finishings.

Another great source of design info:

http://www.tnttt.com/viewforum.php?f=55

Tom
 

pods8

Explorer
So my thoughts on a good camper shell have been changing and evolving.
Well, XPS (extruded polystyrene) is lightweight and good as an insert which would be sandwiched between fiberglass layers. But I am afraid that the resin might melt it and it is still too soft to put a screw in it.

Polyester resin will melt it, epoxy won't. Browse my thread if you want to look at some epoxy/fiberglass over XPS building.
 

DiploStrat

Expedition Leader
You might want to review this thread and compare notes with the builder. He specifically chose wood/fiberglass because it allowed him to maximize his own skills, allowed complete flexibility on tank and cabinet shapes, and (and this is the point I really like) because all of the internal fittings - seats, cabinets, tanks, etc., serve to reinforce the external shell. Very elegant monocoque construction.
 

Ndmker

New member
Many thanks for the replies. Here are some of my thoughts:

1. I have read about stitch&glue but I still think it is way too heavy. My construction is supposed to be a shield from the elements and only the ribs will perform any form of support for furniture and other stuff. I think that building the whole structure with plywood (stitch&glue) plus covering it in fibreglass makes all the work useless. My goal is to keep the weight of the vehicle under 3 tonnes and I am already starting with a heavy chassis.

2. I don't know what to do with the opinion of Treenail. I don't know why he, as an arborist, is so pessimistic about wood. Maybe there is some more knowledge, he could share with us. From what I know, almost nothing can happen to a block of wood entirely covered in fiberglass and resin. There will be no piece of wood exposed to air neither inside or outside the camper, so where could the problem be? I might as well use waterproof plywood for the ribs. I have some pieces of plywood which have been left outdoors half a year ago (rainy autumn, freezing winter, and now rain again). They are still straight and with no swelling. So sealing such plywood ribs between fiberglass looks like a perfect solution at least for 20 years. But maybe Treenail will comment, which would be great.

3. The more I think about this, the more I am willing to go for wood instead of XPS. Mainly due to strength issues. If I put a screw in XPS I can take if off by hand, but a screw in wood is solid. So any furniture I attach to XPS will actually rely only on the strength of fiberglass, but whatever I screw into wood will strengthen the whole construction even more by pressing furniture/fiberglass/wood against one another.
 

Treenail

Adventurer
What do you want your shell to do for you? Have you considered buying a shell and modifying?

Here's a Craigslist search tool that makes searching easy:

http://www.searchtempest.com/

If wood is kept dry or saturated with water, like dock posts under water, won't rot. The decay micro-organisms need oxygen and water to live. The best environment for the rougish fungis to live in is damp.

From what I've seen of camper construction wood will eventually get damp. If you could encase the wood in 'glass and then never break that seal you might be OK. It seems that mounting screws get set into the wood which makes an opening. Something that I had never thought about but someone on a camper-build forum shared was how a screw can act as a heat sink in the wood. This will cause tiny bits of condensation from the humidity in the air. Over time this leads to rot.

I wouldn't even consider using treated wood. More than likely you'd have to rip the wood to size. The center of some treated wood doesn't get the full dose so you'd have an opening that decay could enter. If I were using wood in this application I'd use cedar or even white or burr oak which are naturally decay resistant.

If I understand your design you're making the vertical channels as stiffeners. In that case whatever is inside won't add very much to the strength. If you used thick walled PVC you would have a material that could support some loads. The glass will too of course but it would have to be thick in order to support very much sheer load. Foam strips would add shape and glass would give the support if thats all you need.
 

pods8

Explorer
3. The more I think about this, the more I am willing to go for wood instead of XPS. Mainly due to strength issues. If I put a screw in XPS I can take if off by hand, but a screw in wood is solid. So any furniture I attach to XPS will actually rely only on the strength of fiberglass, but whatever I screw into wood will strengthen the whole construction even more by pressing furniture/fiberglass/wood against one another.

If you were to use XPS I wouldn't be looking at doing ribs to stiffen things instead I'd just make the whole thing a sandwich panel. Separating two skins will take less fiberglass to get the stiffness you are looking for verse a single thickness of fiberglass. Also unless you have a mold to shape the fiberglass into you can just shape the XPS to the form you want. That's what I'm doing on my camper, but it is time consuming as a warning but aren't all these projects :p. I opted to embed wood in there for attachment points but I also plan to inject resin into screw holes that I do make to seal the wood fibers in the hole up the best I can (also I did use cedar in places I thought I might through bolt or have a large lag bolt in, both for rot resistance and weight savings). In general though I plan to surface mount as much as possible to fiberglass skin with adhesive/epoxy. If one really wanted to avoid wood for attachment points either buying some thicker FRP stock (or other plastic that bonds well to resin) or laying up some of your own to use as attachment points similar to wood would remove wood completely from the equation. I felt reasonably comfortable with wood because there are wood/epoxy boats out there doing just fine when they are properly constructed/maintained, neglect will ruin all the best laid plans but that is at the hands of the user.

Also I'm trying to build mine well for the long haul but devils advocate on the situation is I'll have either started a new version or overhauled it long before a previously mentioned 20yrs.
 
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DiploStrat

Expedition Leader
Many thanks for the replies. Here are some of my thoughts:

1. I have read about stitch&glue but I still think it is way too heavy. My construction is supposed to be a shield from the elements and only the ribs will perform any form of support for furniture and other stuff. I think that building the whole structure with plywood (stitch&glue) plus covering it in fibreglass makes all the work useless. My goal is to keep the weight of the vehicle under 3 tonnes and I am already starting with a heavy chassis.

The assumption here is that you would be using two layers of relatively light plywood, separated by insulation of some sort. The structure would gain its strength from its complexity, not from the raw strength of any one panel. Those who work with metal frames and various plastic panels work the other way - the panels add no strength.

Thus, if you do it right, each window, etc., would actually serve as a reinforcement of the panel structure and reduce the number of ribs required. Similarly, any place a cabinet joins the wall, the cabinet framing replaces a rib. Watch the videos on Shachagra and you will get the idea. Probably the only place you would need to use heavy plywood would be the floor, and even here, I use a double structure with insulation. (And a few ribs.)

Good luck!
 

windsock

Adventurer
So my thoughts on a good camper shell have been changing and evolving.

First I started with a steel and aluminium frame and was eager to cover it with aluminium sheet. But I resigned because of the weight of steel, the lack of flexibility of aluminium and because of the softness and weight of aluminium sheets (aluminium doesn't bounce back so every hit by a branch leaves a dent). Oh I forgot to mention that sticking together alu sheets is not so elegant and prone to create leaks. Plus it would cost me a lot of Sikaflex. In other words a metal cage covered in alu is a dumb idea, although the easiest to make.

I for one am puzzled by the logic you have used to write off the aluminium and steel as a dumb idea. I'll note my experience for what it is worth. I lived (vs camping temporarily) in aluminium clad, steel or aluminium framed campers for many years (quite a few years ago now) and don't see the logic of your discussion playing out in reality.

All other materials you have discussed could theoretically be damaged to some degree by the same sort of impact you mention that could damage an aluminium panel. You can buy different tensile strengths of aluminium panel and so you can design to minimise damage from impacts. Auminium can be patched easy (in the field or workshop although cosmetics suffer somewhat), is easy to construct and can be easily joined. Like any construction method, it should be based on good design around the materials used. You indicate the cost of sikaflex as an issue but then mention using it to also join other materials. All other methods you have indicated above have their issues either with construction duration, field repair or cosmetically over time. I have seen professionally constructed fibreglass cracking and 'crazing' after a few years. I have seen stone chips take out chunks of glass resin. I guess new space-age materials allow for a bit more impact resistence etc but every material out there will be prone to various issues on overlanding vehicles if used as intended. The side of my land rover is a testament to the ability of alumimium to withstand impacts. Sure it shows creases and dents but this is from 26 years of general farm use and offroading. Any other material would also have been damaged under the impacts inflicted.

Weight can be an issue if design is poor. If I did it all again I would use high-risk impact zones and weather tightness (sheet seam location) as the two design-related factors in deciding framing positions and the thickness (and therefore the weight) of the steel or aluminium wall of the framing material. All other areas of cladding not supported directly with structural framing would be supported by interior constructions for seats, storage and shelving that would be in there no matter what the exterior cladding. If you treat the design of the frame thus you can minimise the framing required and don't end up with something looking like a house frame. I would also use the logic that the carrier-vehicle was prone to impact damage and could be repaired so why not design the camper along the same lines instead of aiming for a bullet-proof panic-room type of safe room. Things get damaged out there, be able to fix it in the field and drive on. The ability to effect a simple field repair and to drive a camper designed for the purpose of providing shelter from the storms is what I liked about what I had and would be seeking to replicate if building today.

Flexibility can be included in the design or can be excluded as required. Aluminium can 'warp' to take up flexing whereas I see other construction methods and materials could also have problems if not designed for. If flexibilityis excessive then the seams can be under stress and again, good design is your friend.

One problem that I had that you don't mention is thermal bridging. This was an issue that I found in my house trucks and buses over the years when in very cold environments. It can be designed out if careful consideration is given.

Would I camp in the same sort of thing these days? Difficult to say. In all honesty, for ease of construction and durability in the environment I drive into for my current camping, most likely yes. As in all cases related to individual choice, your mileage may vary.

I am not saying don't build with anything else but aluminium cladding and steel or aluminium framing. What I am trying to say is don't write off aluminium as a building material for the reasons you have given.

I look forward to continued discussion and wish you all the best in your eventual choices and ensuing camping/overlanding.
 

Ndmker

New member
Windsock, the problems with aluminium are numerous. I am an alu lover as I've spent most of my childhood on mountain bikes (downhill/freeride) and simply love the material, but...

But I had to give up my favorite metal because it doesn't seem to fit the purpose.

1. Weight- no matter how thin is your alu sheet, it will weigh more than fiberglass.
2. Yes, I forgot about thermal bridging.
3. We also need to add condensation, which means humidity, which means corrosion of other metals like steel or fungus on fabrics
4. Aluminium is harder to stick together than fiberglass. I have a TIG welder and like working with alu, but in spite of that I consider alu troublesome.
5. The ease of on-trail repair doesn't convince me. I is easier to unroll a bit of fiberglass mat, soak it in resin and patch a hole, than carry alu sheet, metal scissors and play with rivets or sikaflex.
6. I also heard that alu can't directly stick to steel due to corrosion.
7. Another problem is shaping aluminium. It is hard to create an aerodynamic shape or rounded corners. I would need to have an English wheel for that. Yes, free form shapes can be achieved by stitching together various small pieces of alu sheet but I don't want a camper that looks like an armadillo.
8. Oh and I forgot about aluminium maintenance. The elements can create aluminium corrosion so I would need either to paint the camper or polish it from time to time, while the fiberglass gelcoat is just a ready to use surface.


Maybe I could live with all those problems but point no.1 is vital, which is weight. Light weight means better fuel economy, less strain on the frame, shorter braking distance, less risk of tipping over etc. Sometimes a difference of 200-500kg means that either you pass over that wooden bridge or fall into the river. The fact that a 4.5L gasoline engine can handle 6 tons easily is not an argument.



The assumption here is that you would be using two layers of relatively light plywood, separated by insulation of some sort. The structure would gain its strength from its complexity, not from the raw strength of any one panel. Those who work with metal frames and various plastic panels work the other way - the panels add no strength.
Thus, if you do it right, each window, etc., would actually serve as a reinforcement of the panel structure and reduce the number of ribs required. Similarly, any place a cabinet joins the wall, the cabinet framing replaces a rib. Watch the videos on Shachagra and you will get the idea. Probably the only place you would need to use heavy plywood would be the floor, and even here, I use a double structure with insulation. (And a few ribs.)
Good luck!

DiploStrat, I understand the idea behind a sandwich structure but it is still overbuilt. Let's count all the layers

- external fiberglass and resin to protect the wood
- plywood
- XPS or other insulation
- plywood
- internal fiberglass and resin to protect the wood
- a fabric or other interior finish

Problem 1- Whenever I drill a hole I compromise the structure by exposing the wood to the elements so I need to isolate every drilled hole
Problem 2- where do I route the tubing or cables? I would need to create some external channels which robs me space and is not elegant. Yes, I can route stuff in between plywood panels but this would be a problem if anything breaks: ripping a cable or pipe from the wall would be like destroying the whole camper wall.

My idea is to make the build more user-friendly, though definitely not builder-friendly

- fiberglass wall with reinforcement ribs made of wood blocks or strips of waterproof plywood.
- in between the ribs I put XPS panels as isolation
- interior 'cozy' layer like thin 4mm kapok plywood (almost 3x lighter than pine) covered with nice fabric (I used alcantara for my previous camper).


Below is a diagram. My idea is also to make a sandwich structure but with removable inner wall for cable routing etc.

wall-exploded-view.jpg
 

pods8

Explorer
while the fiberglass gelcoat is just a ready to use surface.

Do you have a mold to make this camper shell in? Otherwise you won't be gel coating since the way that is normally done is to lay down the gel coat and then the fiberglass. If you don't have a mold then you'll still be painting.

DiploStrat, I understand the idea behind a sandwich structure but it is still overbuilt. Let's count all the layers

- external fiberglass and resin to protect the wood
- plywood
- XPS or other insulation
- plywood
- internal fiberglass and resin to protect the wood
- a fabric or other interior finish

There doesn't need to be plywood layers in there unless you design it that way.

Problem 2- where do I route the tubing or cables? I would need to create some external channels which robs me space and is not elegant. Yes, I can route stuff in between plywood panels but this would be a problem if anything breaks: ripping a cable or pipe from the wall would be like destroying the whole camper wall.

If you're planning to use kapok on the inside anyways your main shell could still be a glass-foam-glass sandwich and then just offset the plywood on raised strips so you can chase wires behind it. Only reason I'm saying towards the sandwich is you mentioned weight above, I'd bet you'll use less fiberglass/resin doing a sandwich as opposed to trying to do a single skin and ribs (not to mention working glass down around each rib would be slow compared to a flat layer that would be the interior of the sandwich).

Personally I'm just painting my interior walls and wiring conduit will be embedded in some key locations in my roof, most the wiring in the lower camper will be inside cabinets/trim pieces. IF it ever came up I missed something I'd surface mount some conduit or trim but hopefully proper planning will address most future needs.
 

jronwood

Adventurer
I was stationed in Hawaii some 25 years ago and watched a guy in the military moral support wood shop build and wood and fiberglass a truck cap. When my ETS came up several month later I went home and in my Mom's garage with only a few rudimentary tools did the same. A little heavy but it was EASY and it came out great. Dont worry about the wood, if it were a full blown RV, well OK good arguement, but it is a smallish unit.



Jronwood
 

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