I am planning on picking up a gooseneck horse trailer to convert into a camper / boondock trailer
I am not a fan of the conventional or mass produced travel trailers. cheaply built, weak batteries, crappy plumbing, etc. i think i can put together a simple design that would out last any commercially build one. plus it would be a gooseneck trailer as opposed to the normally used 5th wheel so i could utilize the B&W hitch i already have. better articulation or rough roads
i plan on making it completely an off-the-grid style trailer. 150~200 gallon water tanks, composting toilet, 48 volt forklift battery, not sure yet if i will break battery into two 24 volt units wired in parallel or keep it 48 volts. two 24 volt packs will allow me to do better weight distribution by placing each one on opposite sides and not in the middle where i want walking space
i also want to pack the roof full of solar panels. i calculated out a max of 2000 watts of solar best case and 1200 watts worse case. my math seems to indicate i would need a minimum of 1200 watts of solar with something like 3 solar hours in the winter to keep the batteries topped off each day.
i also want to make it completely electric with no permanent gas or propane cooking, cooling heating or whatever most use the propane for. i was thinking of using a counter top single induction cook top and microwave for the times i couldn't cook everything outdoors over a fire. i would store food in a 5 cf chest freezer and 5cf chest cooler.
charging would be controlled via a Morningstar’s TriStar MPPT solar controller off of the solar panels. i was also thinking of either using a step up DC to DC converter to charge from the truck if needed or perhaps converting or purchasing a dedicated 24 or 48 volt alternator.
120/240 AC would come from a large pure sinewave inverter. haven't settled on a wattage yet. minimum of 2k watt but maybe a 3 or 4 kw but these can get pricing and inefficient at that range. i would install outlets around the inside all powered by the inverter. plus maybe some on the outside too.
i will insulate all of the walls, ceiling and floor with as high R value as i can afford. i am looking at doing a 4" spray in insulation right now but am afraid of it putting pressure on the panels and creating a bowed out or ballooning affect on the skin of the trailer.
attached is a quick mockup of what i was planing on doing
let me know if any of you have experience in doing something like this or have any pointers or suggestions.
I am not a fan of the conventional or mass produced travel trailers. cheaply built, weak batteries, crappy plumbing, etc. i think i can put together a simple design that would out last any commercially build one. plus it would be a gooseneck trailer as opposed to the normally used 5th wheel so i could utilize the B&W hitch i already have. better articulation or rough roads
i plan on making it completely an off-the-grid style trailer. 150~200 gallon water tanks, composting toilet, 48 volt forklift battery, not sure yet if i will break battery into two 24 volt units wired in parallel or keep it 48 volts. two 24 volt packs will allow me to do better weight distribution by placing each one on opposite sides and not in the middle where i want walking space
i also want to pack the roof full of solar panels. i calculated out a max of 2000 watts of solar best case and 1200 watts worse case. my math seems to indicate i would need a minimum of 1200 watts of solar with something like 3 solar hours in the winter to keep the batteries topped off each day.
i also want to make it completely electric with no permanent gas or propane cooking, cooling heating or whatever most use the propane for. i was thinking of using a counter top single induction cook top and microwave for the times i couldn't cook everything outdoors over a fire. i would store food in a 5 cf chest freezer and 5cf chest cooler.
charging would be controlled via a Morningstar’s TriStar MPPT solar controller off of the solar panels. i was also thinking of either using a step up DC to DC converter to charge from the truck if needed or perhaps converting or purchasing a dedicated 24 or 48 volt alternator.
120/240 AC would come from a large pure sinewave inverter. haven't settled on a wattage yet. minimum of 2k watt but maybe a 3 or 4 kw but these can get pricing and inefficient at that range. i would install outlets around the inside all powered by the inverter. plus maybe some on the outside too.
i will insulate all of the walls, ceiling and floor with as high R value as i can afford. i am looking at doing a 4" spray in insulation right now but am afraid of it putting pressure on the panels and creating a bowed out or ballooning affect on the skin of the trailer.
attached is a quick mockup of what i was planing on doing
let me know if any of you have experience in doing something like this or have any pointers or suggestions.