
how to build a dolly
#1
Posted 10 January 2010 - 02:21 PM
question is has anyone ever built a dolly for moving a camper around a garage? I can not store the camper out side because my town will ticket me. Some stupied ordiance. Any help would be great.
Thanks Paul
#2
Posted 10 January 2010 - 04:07 PM

#3
Posted 10 January 2010 - 06:21 PM
#4
Posted 10 January 2010 - 09:24 PM
Here is the trolley I built for moving and working on my camper. My garage is short so I built it so that at there fully closed height the jacks clear the floor by 2 inches. This trolley is big and overbuilt because I was doing an extensive re-model of the camper. I replaced both lift panels, all new foam and upholstery, new faucet, new water pump and all new wiring. For this reason I wanted to be able to have two or three people standing in the camper while it was on the trolley without worrying about damaging, breaking or separating the floor pack. If you only want to move the camper and not be in it while on the trolley you can build something much smaller and akin to a standard furniture dolly. The guys at ATC use some of these smaller dolly's in there shop to move campers around.

You'll have to excuse the messy garage. I barely finished the remodel in time to hit the road for our Christmas road trip so the shop has not recovered yet.


I used a 4x4 as the bottom support for it because those 4" rubber casters that you see are $16 a piece and I didn't want to have to buy 2 more to support the middle so the 4x4 allowed me to go the 7' span with no center support. You could probably use smaller casters than 4" but I have a 1 inch concrete lip at the front of my garage that I had to overcome so the 4" casters make it a lot easier to get over the hump. My garage was built in the 50's so it's not tall enough to back the truck in and drop the camper. I have to drop it in the driveway, put it on the dolly and roll it into the garage.

I hope these pictures give you some ideas and again if you don't want to be able to have two people standing in, loading or working on the camper while on the trolley you can build something a lot smaller than this.
Good luck and post some pics of what you end up with!
Rich
#5
Posted 10 January 2010 - 09:27 PM
#6
Posted 10 January 2010 - 11:20 PM
There several threads here about camper dollies. Here's one:
http://www.wanderthe...page__hl__dolly
2017 Ram 3500 6.4L gas SRW, CC, 2wd, 8' bed
2007 FWC Grandby--Sold
2015 Hallmark Ute XL
#7
Posted 11 January 2010 - 02:22 AM
Bryan
2003 Dodge CTD- 2010 Grandby
2011 GSP, turbo charged hunting machine
#8
Posted 11 January 2010 - 02:49 AM
Has anyone drilled and bolted castors directly to the jack feet? I don't see why this wouldn't work.
Bryan
I have a slanted driveway and a one inch lip of concrete to overcome, I'd be afraid of the sideways torque on the jack brackets. If you can drive in and drop your camper directly in the garage I think that would work fine.
#9
Posted 11 January 2010 - 03:55 AM
I wish it would work, because we have always wanted to do it to make things faster.
But you are going to have some twisted jacks and a bent camper frame if the surface is not perfectly flat and smooth.
Almost every camper I have seen with caster wheels bolted to the feet of the jacks had a bent camper frame.
There is just too much twisting.

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Has anyone drilled and bolted castors directly to the jack feet? I don't see why this wouldn't work.
Bryan
.
Stan Kennedy --- Four Wheel Pop-up Campers
1400 Churchill Downs Avenue, Suite A
Woodland, CA 95776
(800) 242-1442 or (530) 666-1442
www.fourwh.com --- e-mail = stan@fourwh.com
#10
Posted 11 January 2010 - 05:16 AM
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