Hi all,
(This is my first post, hi! Apologies for asking a question rather than helping someone else first!)
Having bought a damp ridden '86 Abbey GT212 that I can't afford to just throw away, I'm attempting to repair/restore it. I've read most of the Fixedit Club sites, and these have been mega helpful and very encouraging. My van is in a complete state, but I reckon I can fix it!
Anyway, onto my question(s!)...
A big part of the rear end of my floor is rotten (falling apart, not just delaminated). The ply skin just falls off, leaving only the styrofoam core.... not the most structural of compenents!
From what I've seen so far, the construction is something along the lines of:
If my assumptions/questions are correct this would make the floor look something like:
The rotten areas of my floor are:
So my plan is to replace the whole floor from the wheels backwards.... any suggestions as to what with? I'd thought of WBP ply, but to match the thickness of the laminated floor would be VERY heavy and expensive. My current thoughts are to build a frame topped with ~12mm ply (so the floor level matches the remaining laminate flooring) to keep the weight down, but the strength up. This would also allow some insulation to be put underneath:
Caveat: I know I am letting myself in for a massive amount of work, but I am planning to reframe the caravan from the inside out. As I say, I can't afford anything better. So far I've stripped everything inside, so I can see all the issues I have. I know that the shell is fastened to the floor battens, which is why I'm going to have to be very cunning on how I do the replacement!!
Can anyone offer any words of wisdom, any advice? Even a "looks good to me" would be very helpful!
I'm still getting my head around how a caravan gets its strength, but from what I can see the floor is about as integral as you get!!
Thanks for ANY advice, James
Post last edited on 09/02/2010 21:10:22
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