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- MrWizardModeratorGood to hear
Thanks for the follow up - djgoddenExplorerWell nuts do indeed create a water tight seal, provided you also slather up the screw itself. The EDPM roof bunches a little as the rubber of the wellnut compresses and deforms (as it should). I didn't have any problem with the EDPM roofing twisting along with the drill bit. Just cleanly sliced right through it. I used a 1/2 wood bit at high speed. No worries, easy peasy.
- BumpyroadExplorer
RVcircus wrote:
Bumpyroad wrote:
what might work is a type of well nut that BPS and other marine dealers sell to mount trolling motors on a flat surface. about 3-4 inches long rubber with a brass nut that when you tighten it down it mashes the rubber out and ends up being fairly secure. it has to be secure when you have a 40-80 lb. thrust trolling motor jerking it around.
bumpy
Do you know if the rubber creates a water tight seal?
I don't know if it does but it is a long well nut type of thing that smashes a rubber gasket at the hole when tightened down.
bumpy - RVcircusExplorer II
Bumpyroad wrote:
what might work is a type of well nut that BPS and other marine dealers sell to mount trolling motors on a flat surface. about 3-4 inches long rubber with a brass nut that when you tighten it down it mashes the rubber out and ends up being fairly secure. it has to be secure when you have a 40-80 lb. thrust trolling motor jerking it around.
bumpy
Do you know if the rubber creates a water tight seal? - navegatorExplorerIf drilling use a piece of wood big enough to neel on it and drill though the wood into the roof, this will maintain the membrane from turning and bunching on the drill bit.
navegator - djgoddenExplorerI mounted my King dish to the roof yesterday. The 1 inch long 1'2 inch diameter wellnuts worked great and after tugging and yanking on the antenna a few times I decided the Montana would disintegrate before this thing came off. Slathered the nuts good with lap sealant and called it a night.
- BumpyroadExplorerwhat might work is a type of well nut that BPS and other marine dealers sell to mount trolling motors on a flat surface. about 3-4 inches long rubber with a brass nut that when you tighten it down it mashes the rubber out and ends up being fairly secure. it has to be secure when you have a 40-80 lb. thrust trolling motor jerking it around.
bumpy - AlmotExplorer IIIMy first and only experience with well nuts - on 1/4" wall panel - was rather discouraging. I was installing a 5-pound controller and didn't want to use 4 tapping screws on this thin plywood. After I removed the screw (and controller) to see how the first well nut was doing, it pulled itself into the wall with the lip and all, and disappeared there. Had to put another one, with huge washer to prevent this from happening again.
For roof brackets I used 4" aluminum angle, 6" long. Where I couldn't hit the rafters, I used 5 screws #10 per bracket. After many calculations and estimates I've decided that 5 screws per 4"x6" plate was more than enough for a flat 40"x65" panel. With plenty of Dicor under the bracket and over the screw heads. - djgoddenExplorerMy Montana has an aluminum framing structure and when I spoke to Mike Thompson RV in Colton they told me how they put on solar panels to these units. They use ignore the framing and use well nuts and cover those with lap sealant. I neglected to ask them if they drilled or did some other prep first.
- 2oldmanExplorer III drill directly into mine.
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RV projects you can tackle on your own with a few friendly pointers.4,353 PostsLatest Activity: Feb 14, 2025