A friend is selling a 2004 TAB T16 (number 299 manufactured in November 2003) that is in excellent condition except for some questionable areas in the floor. Everything works: Cool Cat, power converter, Northern Breeze vent fan, Norcold 3 way fridge, etc. It has all options except propane heat and includes cover, external tent and external canopy. The trailer has mostly been covered and parked in a local campground so the exterior and bottom look almost new. Total towing distance since 2004 is probably less than 2000 miles.
My concern is the floor. Inside the door sill and spanning about 6 inches into the interior, the floor is soft - see picture. If I pushed hard with the tip of my left shoe, it might go through the floor top layers. Underneath, the floor waterproofing mesh membrane looks fine and is tighty adhered except under the entry door area and on the left side under the Cool Cat. In those 2 areas the mesh membrane has delaminated. Pushing up on that area there is a crunchy noise that may just be the mesh moving or may be delaminated plywood. At the door sill, the floor sags almost 1/2 inch where it meets the cabin wall. Looking underneath, the floor has sagged at the outside rear of each wheel well where the vertical cabin wall meets the floor. See the circled area in the 2 underneath pictures, the sag is at least 1/4 inch.
I am wondering if the original Dutchman floor design was adequate. Much of the cabin wall and roof weight is bearing on the edge of a floor structure that cantilevers out from the Alko chassis rails. That cantilever is bound to flex some, but does 1/4 inch sag at the outside rear of wheel wells indicate impending strucural problems ?
I could cover and reinforce the 2 soft areas with metal above and below, but that wont address the sag at rear wheel wells.
It would help to know if others who own Dutchman TABs observe any sag of the cantilevered floor similar to my pictures. Does the new floor used by NuCamp since 2017 have a stronger structure that does not exhibit any sag as it cantilevers out to meet the cabin walls ?
Thanks, Mike
Comments
Is the "drop" only in the areas you mentioned or is it noticeable up and down the length of the trailer ? That would give an idea how much of the floor compromised.
2015 Subaru Outback 3.6r (unsafe 200lb tongue weight limit until 2020 models)
2020 Subaru Outback XT
Pacific NW
https://tab-rv.vanillacommunity.com/discussion/comment/44911#Comment_44911
https://tab-rv.vanillacommunity.com/discussion/comment/89153#Comment_89153
https://tab-rv.vanillacommunity.com/discussion/comment/48459#Comment_48459
The most susceptible areas in DM T@B's are the wheel wells, front corners, cool cat opening, and door bottom. The crunchy sound at door area is delaminated plywood, the sagging edges is the floor structure falling apart.
The luan plywood used by Dutchman is not water resistant nor did they use waterproof glue.
IMHO - you need a whole new floor. . . It's worth it to make your vintage T@B new again.
T@BMahal
'04 #100
2015 Subaru Outback 3.6r (unsafe 200lb tongue weight limit until 2020 models)
2020 Subaru Outback XT
Pacific NW
MOUSE-KE-T@B
2007 Dutchmen T@B Clamshell #2741
2022 nuCamp T@B 320 CS-S
2021 F-150 502A Lariat SuperCrew, 3.5 EcoBoost 4x2
Harvest, AL
MOUSE-KE-T@B
2007 Dutchmen T@B Clamshell #2741
2022 nuCamp T@B 320 CS-S
2021 F-150 502A Lariat SuperCrew, 3.5 EcoBoost 4x2
Harvest, AL
Several folks here have done creative patches and repairs to limited areas of their floor. I have not heard how many were successful as follow up posts on many projects is limited.
You definitely do not want this to happen. . .
T@BMahal
'04 #100
It's very important to understand that the floor strength is totally dependent on the bonds between the core (aluminum tubes) and the skins (plywood sheets). Any one of the components on there own are incapable of any meaningful support of the trailer loads. Much like corrugated cardboard is just three sheets of paper without the glue. Even if the plywood looks solid (unlikely). if the 18 year old bonds between it and the aluminum tubes are failing (likely), the strength is lost. One of he first sign of a sagging floor is in the wheel well areas of the interior. You will find the tops of the side benches do not sit flat and square any longer and the center support is breaking loose from the outer wall or inner framing. (Some examples pictured below). High mileage and rough roads aggravate the condition.
Everything is repairable but this problem is not a matter of patching or replacing bad areas. The floor assembly has to be one single solid structure.
Good luck...
Bob
Bench top center support - outer wall
Bench top center support - inner bench front
The photos from the old forum may be those from a friend who had a very detailed thread on his complete floor rebuild and replacement process. He often said he should of bought a floor from NuCamp in retrospect.