FB thread this morning, with pictures of the Outback shelf over the passenger window fallen off the wall.
Hard to tell what failed here: the wooden "bracket" or one of the screws. The question becomes: how are these shelves attached to the side walls of the trailer.
I wound up reading through the "Grab Handle" thread that has much discussion of the construction of the side walls, how the door is attached, and how the outside grab bar is attached.
During that discussion, an owner
@Bill@ndRox managed to wangle a schematic of the side walls from NuCamp. The conversation focused a bit on "EGS", which is apparently a thin aluminum "framing" material around the door, and..maybe...the window. (Something has to hold the window frame in place). There is one quick mention of the shelf over the window, but the question was not answered.
This is one of the schematics from that comment. There does seem to be "something" framing the window. Would this be the same sort of framing found around the door where the outside grab handle was mentioned? Does the shelf attach to the side wall the same basic way the outdoor grab handle is attached?
2017 Outback
Towed by 2014 Touareg TDi
Comments
For example:
TV: '17 Colorado V6 Z71 4x4, Tow Package, GM Brake Controller
Adventures: 54 Nights: 341 Towing Miles 43,780
This is one of the better forums for useful information, active members, and detailed discussions.
TV: '17 Colorado V6 Z71 4x4, Tow Package, GM Brake Controller
Adventures: 54 Nights: 341 Towing Miles 43,780
Is the vertical board under your failed shelf just for photo purposes or was it part of the construction? Was the failed board horizontal or vertical? I assume horizontal- can you help us correlate the screw in wall above the ply ledger strip to its location on the maple shelf or other piece, and the screw hole below the ledger strip to its partner?
One hopes these locations correspond with the EGS strip.
In the first photo: was the raw plywood ledger strip visible or hidden? 5-ply is not cabinet grade and is weaker than 9 to 13 ply baltic birch which they should be using for anything in the Tab. They may have screwed the ledger in place from the outside face of the EGS (likely 22 to 28 ga thin galvy sheetmetal strip).
In the second photo: looks like solid maple or pine shelf which they pocket screwed to either the ply ledger strip or through the the composite wall hopefully into the EGS strip. Two issues:
a. they undoubtedly overdrove the pocket screw and split out the shelf during installation, which later split further and failed.
b. The black screw sticking out the shelf looks like a coarse thread drywall screw and could be used into the weak ply edge but is incorrect to hold in the sheetmetal. Any drywall screw in sheetmetal has too coarse and thread and will cam out with vibration or torque.
Dadoing the solid shelf to receive the ledger, and screwing up through the face would have been a stronger connection than end grain. Brackets, dowels, t nuts, or other methods would have made a stronger connection.
In our 2021 Boondoggle we see many failures of cabinet joinery which required fixes. Blowouts and widespread veneer damage from lack of predrilling, blowouts and stripping of overdriven fasteners, stripping of square drive heads by using 100% improper Phillips bits, and more are rampant misconstruction errors.
(edited on desktop since first post.)
2021 T@B 320S Boondock/ 2012 Tacoma 4 cylinder truck / 2023 Tacoma 6 cyl. truck