looking to put a sign on the gate to my trailer ... called my lawn sign company and they said they have to "ask around" to find out how to secure it ... any suggestions?
I am assuming your trailer gate is the fold-down, with expanded mesh type, typical in most trailers.....
on my rig - Isuzu NPR with a landscaper body (flatbed, with a 4' sloped ramp section, with a fold down gate), I mounted a metal aluminum 4'x6' large sign on the back. I used pop rivets all around and some in the middle of the sign....... note, a 4'x6' piece of metal in the wind stream has A LOT of wind resistance - thats a big surface!!!
I THOUGHT I had engineered the fastners well enough the first time with the rivets, but the first time out at 50mph, some of the rivets tore loose... If I would have kept going at that speed for any longer, it would have ripped off completely... I was lucky I caught it in time...
I went back, removed the rivets, and replaced with hex-head, self tapping metal screws - the ones with the black rubber washer attached. Went all the way around the perimeter of the sign, every 4 inches, and "in the field" of the sign vertically too on the vertical supports of the ramp.
I suggest OVER engineering the fastners, or you may LOSE your sign to the wind resistance!!!!
I have a fold down trailer and have an aluminum sign on the back. I attached ply wood on the front side to prevent the sign from flexing and just bolted around the perimeter. I used bolts, nuts and lock washers. I have not had any problems. It does create some drag but, I think having a traveling billboard on the back of my trailer is more valuable than the gas mileage I am losing because of the drag.
-- Edited by Roof Cleaning By A&E on Monday 28th of November 2011 04:54:58 PM
I've always used Alumalite sign board. It's a coroplast sign with aluminum panels front and back. This makes it much more rigid than a standard aluminum sign panel, which tend to crack and pull apart from the wind force. To attatch, you can use self tapping screws, drill and tap threads for each screw, or just drill through and use a bolt and nut.
I have a fold down trailer and have an aluminum sign on the back. I attached ply wood on the front side to prevent the sign from flexing and just bolted around the perimeter. I used bolts, nuts and lock washers. I have not had any problems. It does create some drag but, I think having a traveling billboard on the back of my trailer is more valuable than the gas mileage I am losing because of the drag.
-- Edited by Roof Cleaning By A&E on Monday 28th of November 2011 04:54:58 PM