Sandwich Wall Construction

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Re: Sandwich Wall Construction

Postby KCStudly » Sat Sep 26, 2015 1:02 am

There you go. You just can't beat the voice of experience.

:thumbsup:
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Re: Sandwich Wall Construction

Postby dmdc411 » Sun Oct 04, 2015 9:54 am

I did like the first pic tony.latham shows. 1x2 layed flat, 3/4" foam in the voids, 1/4" plywood exterior, and 5mm luan interior. If I do it again, it'll be 1/8" interior, 1/4" exterior. It ends up being amazingly strong. As long as you glue all components on all sides. It creates a torque box.
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Re: Sandwich Wall Construction

Postby Irmo Atomics » Thu Oct 08, 2015 5:58 am

Anjib is right about stick framing. Here’s how a 60 year old camper was framed, and except for water intrusion, would have lasted another 60 – notice the butt joints and lack of continuity?
Image
However, my motto seems to be “why just do it, when you can over-do it?” Image
I put them together with lap joints, glue, screws, biscuits, kregs and any other un-necessary attachment method possible. Image
Anything that you build will probably be strong enough; your biggest enemy will be water (and people on cell phones).
Bob
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Re: Sandwich Wall Construction

Postby KCStudly » Thu Oct 08, 2015 10:34 am

I guess I can't help from looking at this differently. Had the wall frames been originally built as sturdy as your reconstruction, the assembly may have been more stable resulting in less relative motion and less degradation of the waterproofing treatment that may have been in place. Now if it was poorly waterproofed to begin with it may not have made a difference, but I would rather have sound waterproofing over sound structure (yet still lightly built) than neither. Just saying.
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My Build: The Poet Creek Express Hybrid Foamie

Poet Creek Or Bust
Engineering the TLAR way - "That Looks About Right"
TnTTT ORIGINAL 200A LANTERN CLUB = "The 200A Gang"
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