Forum Discussion

SheilaEJ's avatar
SheilaEJ
Explorer
Jun 25, 2021

VERY BAD ROOF/ Please help

Hi Folks

I’m a newbie. Hope you can help.

I’m the new owner of a 1991 30’ Dutchmen Travel Trailer.
It does not travel, located in a seasonal campground in Massachusetts.

The roof has major problems and during rains it poured in, especially in hall area.
I need advice please.
Showed it to one repair person, he said my roof was “ toast” and that the ripples in roof meant that no sealant would do the job. He suggested building a standing RV carport type thing but they are not permitted , and it’s expensive. Or a little pitched roof on top but I don’t think the walls could support that.
Another repair person suggested removing a section of ceiling and replacing trusses. And then sealing roof.

I have roof repair research fatigue. I’d so appreciate any guidance from you folks.
I’m hoping to find a relatively inexpensive way to assess this.
Has anyone ever built a light weight peak roof on top of old travel trailer. Perhaps using canvas and pvc? All ideas welcome. Thank you.
  • Your camper is basically worth $0, and anything you spend on it will not improve its value, so consider that.
    As far as repairing it, you mention a carport which is not allowed, so you’re willing to spend at least a couple few thousand $ ?
    Put the money towards another camper.
    Without any knowledge or diy abilities, you will only spend a lot of $ having some schmuk patch up your camper.

    Your neglect of the camper will cost money to get rectified. Don’t spend the money on that camper.
    Sorry to sound blunt, but if what you say is true, the camper is junk now. And even if it wasn’t, it’s still worth virtually nothing. Maybe a couple grand, but sitting on a seasonal and what you describe , it would prolly cost more to just make roadworthy than it’s worth.
  • jdc1's avatar
    jdc1
    Explorer II
    Walk the roof. If it is spongy, you need to replace the plywood under the roof membrane. The only way to avoid that is to install an aluminum roof. If you find your plywood is still good, the least expensive fix is a truck-bed spray in liner kit (about $1.00 square foot).
  • Most likely you have dry rot in the roof, floor and perhaps walls due to the water. ie More extensive than just roof trusses. Do a complete inspection for soft wood areas, a ice pick or screwdriver can help. ie A future sound roof won't resolve dry rot.

    Based on what you posted I'll speculate that considering cost and effort replacing the trailer is the best option.