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#1
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Great looking trailer Andy. What is the total floor length and what is the depth from the hinge side of the door to the lower front wall without the lower cabinets? Is the floor space 36' or is that the overall length with the bunk? Also, is it framed and pre-wired for rooftop air addition?
Curious if there's room to build a small living area and still have enough floor space to partition off a 20' garage area with a wall. Thanks
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I like solid lifter cars, big cams and cars w/ 3 pedals in them. ![]() Last edited by NorCam; 07-17-2017 at 03:09 PM. |
#2
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Thank you!
The total floor length from the rear door to the front wall is 27'5". The bunk area is another 8' 2". The total exterior length of the trailer is 36'. Maybe an inch or two more - but the paperwork I have says 36'. While we're on the topic of measurements, we accidentally left a couple out of the eBay ad that may be of interest. The rear door opening (with the door down) is exactly 7'. The interior ceiling height of the lower level is 8'. The bunk area is 4' 2" high. Also a correction on the exterior trailer height. From the top of the box to the ground is 10'. The bubbles for the roof vents however add another 8", or so, so for clearance purposes, I wouldn't try anything less than 11'. The doors in my garage are 12' high and work fine. Back to the idea of building a living area wall. I think it would be tough to do. There are two 12 volt batteries and a breaker box (with the 25' shoreline connection) in the bottom of the left cabinet. One battery for the hydraulic jack and one for the dc operation of the dome lights, floor level lights and the loading lights. They would need to stay where they are, so you'd have to build some sort of cabinet around them that's accessible if the existing cabinets are removed. The real problem with building a wall is the spare tire and winch compartments in the floor. If you look at the picture, they butt up against one another, so there's no way to build a wall between them. You'd have to build it with both compartments on the living area side of the wall. Otherwise the sitting area would be tiny if both were on the car side. You could leave the winch on one side of the wall and the hook on the other - but there'd only be about 19' left, including the beavertail ramp. I think most cars are about 18', give or take - so you'd be risking having the car rub against the rear door or the new wall, potentially, when going over bumps. Plus the recessed D rings would be out of position to ratchet strap the car down. That said, I never underestimate someone else's ability to do/modify stuff, but it would definitely be a lot of work. Just my .02. Last edited by LS_5; 07-17-2017 at 03:57 PM. |
#3
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PS - There's no prewiring or framing for rooftop air that I know of.
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