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TorQ's avatar
TorQ
Explorer
May 09, 2017

Filon adhesive/glue removal

Hello there. I just bought a fiberglass class c with some water damage. I am going to attempt to renovate the affected areas. So far I have taken a lot of video and photos which I hope to share here at some point. I've started with the cab over bunk flooring but I have run into a snag. The layer of wood that is bonded to the fiberglass exterior is mostly rotted away and I need to figure out if I can remove it. I am wondering if there is a method for delaminating the wood from the fiberglass. I have searched for adhesive removers but haven't found any specific answers. I also have seen some tangential information that suggests applying heat with a heat gun will work. Can anyone help me with this? Thank you very much.
  • At the moment I would like to maintain the filon that is there. The RV is a 98 and looks pretty nice still so if the filon needs to be replaced I would almost certainly replace it with a new sheet of the same material. It seems that it is easy enough to get.

    On most of the filon there is only a millimeter or so of wood remaining attached. I would like to try a chemical stripper before resorting to sanding. I might go get a heat gun after work tonight and give that a go. Any thoughts on how filon reacts to heat? Should I worry about warping it?
  • DrewE wrote:
    A piece of countertop laminate, for instance, should work just fine.

    Drew, I hate to correct you since your advice is typically spot on but an owner using countertop material should make sure it is not made with paste board or MDF, the usual materials for constructed laminate counter tops. Both of those materials don't have much loading strength and there are better choices like OSB or plywood.
  • It depends on what the adhesive used was.

    If the wood is far enough gone, you can remove the bulk of what used to be wood easily enough, and then clean up the sheeting as seems best. I had good luck with a sort of solid sanding block I picked up somewhere and since forgot the brand name of, a kind of soap-bar sized brick of sand grit held together with a binder of some kind.

    For the bottom of the bunk board, it would not be hard at all to put in most any sort of waterproof sheet product rather than the original Filon. A piece of countertop laminate, for instance, should work just fine.