Forum Discussion
- donn0128Explorer IISorry, IMHO using floor polish will be a mistake. All your doing is putting a shine over the old finish. Instead use good polishing compound to restore the finish followed by quality paste wax. Fiberglas exterior, use McGuires RV Marine or Colinite Fleetwax. Metal siding, any good automotive wax will yeild good results. There is no free ride to maintaining an RV. It takes work, but the results are worth it.
- GdetrailerExplorer IIIAs donn0128 mentions you ARE dealing with INDOOR FLOOR WAX..
Nothing more really needs to be said but folks have insisted on using it, with spotty results. Some folks seem to think it works fine and others have regretted using it after it starts to peel or yellow.
I remember my Mom having to remove old floor wax then rewaxing the floors.. Floor wax even indoors WILL YELLOW, some more than others.
Sure, it will bring an artificial temporary at best "shine" with nearly no effort..
When the floor wax craze started, there was plenty of talk, now, fast forward a few years and zilch, no talk.. The silence should speak volumes..
You need to look realistically at what you really have, an old, worn out paint surface that is degraded. Nothing short of a brand new paint job is going to give you back any real shine for a LONG period of time.
Even auto waxes are a short term, temporary fix..
Wash your RV then if you have the energy, use a good auto wax and forget about using something that was never designed to be used outdoors. - LwiddisExplorer IIx3 on Don’s post. Don’t paint over rust either!
- wildtoadExplorer IITo answer the OP’s question... Yes. I used a floor product on my sun damaged 2000 Hurricane and it made things shine quite nicely. Adding a UV protectant like 303 will help delay the time between reapplication. I would not use ZEP on a finish that is in good shape though.
- JaxDadExplorer IIIHuh, 3 replies, 2 from people who seem to have never tried this method, 1 who has.
The 2 that have never tried it condemn it, the 1 who has used it said worked.
Seems about par for the course around here......... - donn0128Explorer II
JaxDad wrote:
Huh, 3 replies, 2 from people who seem to have never tried this method, 1 who has.
The 2 that have never tried it condemn it, the 1 who has used it said worked.
Seems about par for the course around here.........
Sorry, used the expensive clone. Could not wait to get the **** off after two years. - Retired_JSOExplorerI did the Zep floor polish on our old fifth wheel. At the time, a good buffing and polish would fade in a few weeks. The zep made it shine like new. I would reapply the zep with just one coat about twice a year. Around year 3, I could not control the flaking. Used Zep floor stripper and redid the finish. Traded it after 7 years so who knows what it looks like now.
- GdetrailerExplorer III
JaxDad wrote:
Huh, 3 replies, 2 from people who seem to have never tried this method, 1 who has.
The 2 that have never tried it condemn it, the 1 who has used it said worked.
Seems about par for the course around here.........
I never "condemned" it.
Just stated that after a few years that the "allure" of a cheap, easy fix has lost it's shine..
Slapping a liquid wax that IS designed for indoors might be a quick fix to put an artificial shine, but it is a temporary fix to a long term problem and eventually you will be faced with removing the old and reapplying once again.
Kind of like putting lipstick on a pig, don't you think?
I look for LONG TERM fixes that tend to last.
Repainting with REAL AUTOMOTIVE PAINTS while is expensive can easily result in no need to wax ever again and last well over 15 yrs.
I HAVE done that with modern day automotive Epoxy paints on autos AND RVs..
But then again, I am not a slave to my RV and would rather spend time camping instead of primping a pig. - JimK-NYExplorer IISomeone wrote there is no free ride with RV maintenance. I think Zep comes pretty close. I used Zep on my RV a year ago. Cleaning the RV took some work and time, but 4 coats of Zep went on pretty quickly and was not much work.
A year later, most of the RV looked like I had just waxed it. I did have to clean on lots of bug splatter and dirt off the nose of the RV. I ended up stripping the Zep off with wax stripper and reapplying 4 fresh coats to the nose area. I gave the rest of the RV another coat even though it did not seem to need it. Even with the stripping and work on the front end the entire job was easier than waxing the truck. I may end up using Zep on the truck as well.
BTW, no sign of yellowing after a year exposed to sun and elements. I also did not have those nasty black streaks due to water running off the roof. There was another benefit. In addition to a year of weather, I drove 10k miles through bad weather, dust and lots of bugs. Typically I would wash the RV several times. I never washed it all year and the Zep helped keep it clean. This Spring it quickly washed clean except for some remaining bug splatters.
I would say that Zep is pretty close to a free ride. - tatestExplorer IIThis is a floor finish (originally developed to seal porous floors like terrazo), and while it will yellow with age and ultimately peel from non-porous surfaces, the yellowing is uniform and it is low effort route to a wet look surface compared to many apply and buff automotive waxes, or actually doing an automotive clear-coat.
But even when used on floors, these finishes are not low maintenance, because traffic means they are polished weekly or more often, and stripped and re-applied at least annually, because of uneven wear. In our military training barracks the floors got stripped and re-waxed by each class (10-12 weeks) but that was as much discipline training as it was maintenance.
About RV Tips & Tricks
Looking for advice before your next adventure? Look no further.25,102 PostsLatest Activity: Jan 18, 2025