I like the angle of the roof up front, but you may want to consider angling the rear of the roof from the top of door to make it a slight angle down to the rear. This in effect would make your roof handle like an airplane wing, and as you travel down the road, this would cause the atmospheric pressure to lessen and actually make the trailer lighter.
I used 26 gauge metal roofing material. The bottom metal is very thin and I wanted something tough for the top. The very top of the pop up was all beat up with dents. I believe the metal roofing material will take a better beating from road debris.
This is the best conversion I've seen
Thank you... I really enjoyed doing it.
I like the angle of the roof up front, but you may want to consider angling the rear of the roof from the top of door to make it a slight angle down to the rear. This in effect would make your roof handle like an airplane wing, and as you travel down the road, this would cause the atmospheric pressure to lessen and actually make the trailer lighter.
Nice job. what kind of material did you use for that slick and soft look?
I used 26 gauge metal roofing material. The bottom metal is very thin and I wanted something tough for the top. The very top of the pop up was all beat up with dents. I believe the metal roofing material will take a better beating from road debris.
Wheres the bed?
Sectional makes into a full size bed