Forum Discussion

AmericaOverland's avatar
Jan 16, 2015

Potentially bad situation

I'm in a bit of a bind here in southeast Texas. I'm going to Elgin, near Austin in less than two weeks, maybe a lot sooner if I have a solution.

I have a hybrid travel trailer, the worst mistake I've made in buying a travel trailer. The foldout door leaks in water because of a break in the seal, near where the hinge starts. It happened because the dang factory cut the bed foldout door edge trim a little too long towards the seal, so when it would fold up, the end of that edge would gouge into the seal and bend, cutting out a chunk of the seal and letting water in. I tried to fix it by cutting that edge shorter like it is on the other side and putting some caulk in the part of the seal that was gouged out. Turns out it was the wrong caulk...

Now, I have water damage in the wood behind the sofa bed where the leak it, and mold in the storage compartment...

I also sprung a leak in the back right corner of the roof where the sealant failed, and I tried to fix it, but the yahoo at HD didn't know his sealants... It just came apart like rubber in places, and like cake icing in other places. I just scraped all this off, and I need to go into town and pick up the stuff that will let me chemically strip this stuff off without damaging the rubber roofing, before applying the right sealant.

I posted this here in TTs because I'm wondering whether I need to trade this off and cash in my ENTIRE life savings in order to start fresh and RIGHT for a used travel trailer weighing no more than 2700-2800 lbs dry. I will NEVER buy another trailer from a private individual again.

26 Replies

  • Try to spend your savings on things that will appreciate in value; an RV will depreciate and in most cases be worth half or less in five years. That is not smart use of your money. However, this is an RV forum not a smart money forum. There does come a point where the money pit to keep fixing stuff will exceed the value of the coach and that is not smart, either. You may be putting more into fixing the coach than a very modest payment would be on a much better and more reliable product. Think through your options carefully. Think long term.
  • AmericaOverland wrote:
    .............I posted this here in TTs because I'm wondering whether I need to trade this off and cash in my ENTIRE life savings in order to start fresh and RIGHT for a used travel trailer weighing no more than 2700-2800 lbs dry..........

    I believe that would be a BIG MISTAKE!

    I would never put my entire life savings into a new or used travel trailer. It will only go down hill from there. With depreciation, maintenance, etc. makes it a very poor investment in which to put one's ENTIRE life's savings.
  • I wouldn't rush spending my life savings on more junk. What is the hurry to throw good money after bad?

    I hope you can find something worthwhile, but odds are against you.

    Take your time.
  • Most roof issues can be fixed with Eternabond tape -- lots of info on the web and is permanent fix if applied properly. On vertical issues I use pro flex sealants. Most will tell you to avoid anything with silicon because it rarely works and other sealants won't stick to it.

    Not sure what you have to "remove" from your roof but be careful about what you use to remove the old sealant as it can damage the rubber roof. Eternabond can be applied over most sealants.

    Fans, heat and bleach can help with drying the rig out and mitigating mold.
  • Because there is no extra money for another loan in my budget. I'm still paying off my Jeep...
  • There comes a point a broken object just becomes too much to deal with any more. Sounds like you are ready for a new camper.

    Don't know your financial position, but why not put some down on a new camper and finance the rest, so your savings is not wiped out. There's nothing wrong with paying on a loan.