parlusk
Member
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- 18
- Location
- southwest virginia
good start
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Probably, but with all the stuff crawling around in the dez I like being off the ground. I also like the near zero set up time and the fact it can hold a lot of beer coolers and spare parts.That's got to be the heaviest two-man tent ever.
I thought about raising the sides and sheeting in the gap but -I used my M105A3 as a camper at Haspin this year. Worked out pretty good - and there were FOUR of us in there (wife and two toddlers). I made a bed frame from 2x4 and 3/4" plywood. I put a leg on each rear corner, then one in the middle and let the front of the bed rest on the fender wells. Didn't bolt it to the trailer at all, just the weight of it kept it in place. Had to remove one of the side panels to get it in the trailer though. Put an old fullsize bed mattress on it, I like a firm bed so it worked out good.
I thought about the carpet situation and ended up going with a real thick carpet rug from Walmart. It's easily thick enough that the humps in the bed floor didn't hurt my sock feet. It is big enough to walk around on but still has some bare floor exposed so there is room to take wet / muddy shoes off under the protection of the tarp in the rain - this was real world tested at Haspin TOO MUCH
I really like what you've done with the roof extensions - I may try that myself.
I also wonder if doing it like you did at first and bolting some 3/4" plywood around the exposed rail sides would have resolved the flimsy-ness issues and kept you from having to lengthen the tarp. But then you'd have had to address the gap over the tailgate I guess.
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I used my M105A3 as a camper at Haspin this year. Worked out pretty good - and there were FOUR of us in there (wife and two toddlers). I made a bed frame from 2x4 and 3/4" plywood. I put a leg on each rear corner, then one in the middle and let the front of the bed rest on the fender wells. Didn't bolt it to the trailer at all, just the weight of it kept it in place. Had to remove one of the side panels to get it in the trailer though. Put an old fullsize bed mattress on it, I like a firm bed so it worked out good.
I thought about the carpet situation and ended up going with a real thick carpet rug from Walmart. It's easily thick enough that the humps in the bed floor didn't hurt my sock feet. It is big enough to walk around on but still has some bare floor exposed so there is room to take wet / muddy shoes off under the protection of the tarp in the rain - this was real world tested at Haspin TOO MUCH
I really like what you've done with the roof extensions - I may try that myself.
I also wonder if doing it like you did at first and bolting some 3/4" plywood around the exposed rail sides would have resolved the flimsy-ness issues and kept you from having to lengthen the tarp. But then you'd have had to address the gap over the tailgate I guess.
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