Midget Trailer

This includes traditional teardrop shapes and styles

Midget Trailer

Postby angib » Fri Apr 30, 2004 2:14 pm

Hello to everyone on this list.

One interest of mine is teardrop and small trailer design and I have produced quite a few traditional designs as CAD files.

I have just added a drawing of the 'Streamlined Midget Trailer' from 1940 Popular Mechanics - its name is misleading as it's actually quite large for a teardrop (9' x 5.5' x 5.5').

Angib Designs

Andrew
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Postby mikeschn » Fri Apr 30, 2004 3:29 pm

Hi Andrew,

Good to see you here. Also good to see that you are still cranking out the designs. As you know, looking at new and unique designs is still my favorite pasttime.

So are we ready for a really unique design? Something that hasn't been done before? Something that is still small, still affordable, still easy to tow, still gets you off the ground, but is sooooooo unique, it'll turn heads everywhere?

I am ready for it. But what form, what shape will this thing take? Any ideas? :?

Mike...
The quality is remembered long after the price is forgotten, so build your teardrop with the best materials...
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Postby BufordT » Fri Apr 30, 2004 4:30 pm

Liike wise. Hey do use a favor and post the square tear again. Please.

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Postby Larry Messaros » Sat May 01, 2004 3:07 am

Hi Andrew.

Welcome to the list. I've admired your work on your website for a while. Keep up the great work!
:D
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Postby mikeschn » Fri May 28, 2004 5:03 am

Has anyone looked at the photos of the replica Midget teardrop trailer lately. It's looking really nice!

http://f2.pg.photos.yahoo.com/[email protected]

Bob Kloppe has done a wonderful job!!!

Mike...
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Postby beverlyt » Mon May 31, 2004 1:28 pm

That is so neat! And somewhere to sit! I wonder if that is what folds down into a bed. I'd like to find out what it weighs when finished.
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Postby tdthinker » Thu Jul 01, 2004 12:27 am

that is neat, thanks alot.
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Postby Joe Samp » Sun Oct 31, 2004 7:31 pm

Any body have the geometry (how ever you spell it) for the midgit
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Postby angib » Mon Nov 01, 2004 7:08 am

Joe,

I went to see what I had done for this design and found this:

Image

I've added it, and a more detailed pdf version, to my Midget page.

If you want a different type of information, contact me.

Andrew
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Postby Arne » Mon Nov 01, 2004 7:28 am

I just have to put this out here for discussion. I took a look at the balance point calculator.... I have given this some very simplistic thinking and here is my way of doing it.

Create a miniature profile of the trailer (maybe one inch per foot) out of any non-paper, stiff, material... cardboard of plywood..... Hang a clothes pin from a piece of string. Hang the profile from the clothes pin, moving it till the bottom edge is parallel to the floor. Mark that point... It is the balance point of the empty trailer, but does not deal with tongue weight.

I suppose the profile could be hung upside down and make it even simpler....
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Postby Joe Samp » Mon Nov 01, 2004 12:04 pm

thhanks andrew. what is the formulas for the doing the geometry for figuring out the curves they will not be that hard to gut but i to figure them out first
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Postby angib » Mon Nov 01, 2004 1:06 pm

Joe,

The profile I've drawn is a fairly exact copy of the plans, but some of it is freehand curves. I've added a drawing to my personal album to illustrate this: http://www.tnttt.com/gallery/image.php?image_id=595

While the upper body shapes front and back are almost exactly elliptical, the lower body shapes definitely aren't - they're much more 'bellied'. And they need to be - if they weren't, the door wouldn't fit in.

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Postby angib » Mon Nov 01, 2004 1:18 pm

Arne,

The trick to what you're trying to do is to stick (eg, Blu-Tack) a ruler to your table on its edge - this makes a nice fulcrum on which to balance your cut-out to see where its centre of area is. And you can use paper - just put a crease along the paper to stiffen it up.

HOWEVER, using the centre of area of the profile of your trailer isn't necessarily a good estimate of where the centre of gravity of the trailer will be, even if you ignore all the other weights like the tongue, the galley, the bulkhead, etc.

What you are doing here is assuming that the weight at any point is proportional to the height of the side wall, but in fact a lot of the weight (such as the floor and the roof) does not depend on the height of the side wall.

Sorry to rain on your parade :cry: , 'cos it is a pretty technique - traditionally used for model aircraft.

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Postby Joe Samp » Mon Nov 01, 2004 3:35 pm

Andrew thanks
do you happen to know what size the frame is or what is built with i wonder if i can build it out of steel i am not really concered about weight i something i can move it with
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Postby angib » Mon Nov 01, 2004 6:54 pm

Joe,

The original has a chassis that's mostly oak! So a complete redesign is needed.

The photos of Bob Kloppe's Midget show one way of doing the chassis. Buford may shout at me, but I think this is one trailer where a frame of 2"x1/8" square tube would be appropriate.

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