Hello all, Name is Russell. From an island in Washington.
Been living in a tiny house on a farm for 5 years, but looking to downsize to a 6x12 haulmark cargo trailer so I can tow it with my Toyota 1986 pickup.
I have multiple properties that I manage and my housing is the only non-mobile piece, even though it is on wheels. It is to large, tall and on a single axle.
So my solution is to strip a cargo trailer and refurnishing it with ultralight framing that holds 2" total insulation, swapping out plywood for aluminum flashing interior wall skin, ship lapped with 1/2" cedar between. The ramp door will be flipped and turned into an awning, while the welded hinged will have a deck bolted to the underside so it can be secured with the awning when being towed, while the ramp will be stripped down and framed with cedar to handle only a snow load. A pony wall with a door in the back of the trailer will be the main source of entry. Also be the pass through for a chimney and intake of a small collapsible woodfire stove I built for seasonal use and storage. I will also get the ladder rack addition, so I can make a roof frame from emt conduit, and have steel roofing panels, reinforced with more conduit, that can be bolted onto the ladder rack, dismantled and stored on the ladder rack as a ladder would be for transport. This will increase the lifespan of my roof, and also reduce the noise of rain from reverberating through the house frame.
Overall I am very excited if you can't tell. Building my first tiny house was shoe string at $3000, with to much time put into building everything from scratch and salvage to save money. It has been a good home, but I want the steel studs and countless sheets of iso insulation inside it for business building projects. I am glad I found a Bob wells video, it has opened me up to the vast catalog of tricks and stories that come with building a shelter. I look forward to contributing what I can!
And hopefully, with the housing issue on the island I live for farmers and interns, a solid $5000 cargo trailer house, and a basic communal bathroom/kitchen setup, I can help reduce the strain on young farmers trying to build up and survive. Due to rent costs they live in really run down farm houses that have mold and mice, and some have to travel 45 minutes.
Been living in a tiny house on a farm for 5 years, but looking to downsize to a 6x12 haulmark cargo trailer so I can tow it with my Toyota 1986 pickup.
I have multiple properties that I manage and my housing is the only non-mobile piece, even though it is on wheels. It is to large, tall and on a single axle.
So my solution is to strip a cargo trailer and refurnishing it with ultralight framing that holds 2" total insulation, swapping out plywood for aluminum flashing interior wall skin, ship lapped with 1/2" cedar between. The ramp door will be flipped and turned into an awning, while the welded hinged will have a deck bolted to the underside so it can be secured with the awning when being towed, while the ramp will be stripped down and framed with cedar to handle only a snow load. A pony wall with a door in the back of the trailer will be the main source of entry. Also be the pass through for a chimney and intake of a small collapsible woodfire stove I built for seasonal use and storage. I will also get the ladder rack addition, so I can make a roof frame from emt conduit, and have steel roofing panels, reinforced with more conduit, that can be bolted onto the ladder rack, dismantled and stored on the ladder rack as a ladder would be for transport. This will increase the lifespan of my roof, and also reduce the noise of rain from reverberating through the house frame.
Overall I am very excited if you can't tell. Building my first tiny house was shoe string at $3000, with to much time put into building everything from scratch and salvage to save money. It has been a good home, but I want the steel studs and countless sheets of iso insulation inside it for business building projects. I am glad I found a Bob wells video, it has opened me up to the vast catalog of tricks and stories that come with building a shelter. I look forward to contributing what I can!
And hopefully, with the housing issue on the island I live for farmers and interns, a solid $5000 cargo trailer house, and a basic communal bathroom/kitchen setup, I can help reduce the strain on young farmers trying to build up and survive. Due to rent costs they live in really run down farm houses that have mold and mice, and some have to travel 45 minutes.