Cecilt wrote:
colliehauler wrote:
Cecilt wrote:
colliehauler wrote:
You can add additional braces for the floor for more support.
From top or bottom? If I open my access panel on my underbelly the floor is solid as a rock everywhere I can feel. This may not be the bottom layer of the luan but not sure how I would even access the luan/foam/luan if there is a layer of wood below this.
You have to go in from the bottom to add more floor joists. This would probably involve dropping the holding tanks to access. This is a major job and if your not sure it might be worth calling a RV Mobil tech.
Which is why I probably won't bother. Once I open up the slide for the fridge and stove I throw a 5' long throw rug on the linoleum which keeps us from feeling the softness in the floor.
If you do bother do not listen to the misinformation posted.
Laminated floors typically consist of a sandwich of 1-1/2" beaded Styrofoam with a layer of 3/16" plywood on top, and a layer of 1/8" luan plywood on the bottom. In the foam layer are aluminum tubes. Depending on the RV manufacturer those tubes may be as far as 4' apart. The assembly might be pinch rolled (less desirable) or vacuum pressed (much better). What happens is the Styrofoam layer gets compressed and therefore loses it bond weakening the lamination. It typically happens in high traffic areas such as directly inside the entry door, in front of the sink, in front of the toilet etc.
You can place all the additional supports or joists you want to place underneath but once the foam core gives way you're wasting time and effort. You have to open the assembly from below and remove the compromised beaded foam. Then replace it either with solid wood or new foam, preferably extruded polystyrene and patch the lower luan layer back in, then install the additional joist or cross member.
A few manufacturers finally got it right such as Rockwood / Flagstaff. A few years back they added more aluminum tubes at 24" or 16" on center and made sure additional supports were in high traffic areas. That along with vacuum bonding made their laminated floors almost immune to issues. Even then they finally switched to 5/8" OSB but they call it plywood. To this day some manufacturers such as Keystone still use the laminated assemblies with aluminum tubes on as much as 4' centers such as on their Passport line, pinch rolled and not vacuum pressed. If the owners are of great bulk it's even more problematic.