Shacklaw wrote:
Fulltimin, I just read through this entire thing and you scare the heck out of me! Why? Because I have a 91'Southwind I'm restoring with a "soft wall" by the passenger seat, by the dinette and in the bathroom and several delams on the outside! YIKES! I've just finished the mechanicals and contemplating the inside, and I convinced my wife it was a piece of cake after her begging me to set it on fire! I'm inspired and daunted by your work. Keep it up so I won't loose faith! LOL!
I feel your pain.... The rv manufacturers have used the wall gluing system for years. It does provide a fairly stiff sidewall, without a huge amount of weight. Add a few steel studs in there, and you have a decent wall, assuming you don't roll it over...
So, I would assume your sidewalls are assembled the same way mine are. As such, as you saw in earlier pictures, the outside delamination is because the outside plywood got soaked, and disintegrated. Fleetwood did not use exterior plywood, so the glue just gave up the ghost.
The interior paneling, is basically the same, got wet and started to fall apart. So much for me thinking I can just replace a couple of sheets of paneling, and I am good to go....LOL.
The thing that surprised me the most, was that some of the leaks were not evident, or visible.
I have seen videos of guys that just removed a window, pulled the fiberglass out a little, and shot epoxy down in there, applied pressure from the outside, and left it harden, and called it fixed.
If it's a small area, I suppose that might work, if the leak has been repaired first, and the area dried out first.
If it's a large area, I'm not sure that is a great idea, but to each his own.
In our case, my wife and I decided before I started this project, that the inside should be upgraded, and look a little more homey...(not homely)... homey - more like a home.
Little did I realize what I was actually getting into. LOL.
However, rv's are available anywhere, but having one that looks more like a home inside, is something special, built to suit the owner. There are pictures of rv's around, that were upgraded, sometimes with just paint, wallpaper, cabinet doors, kitchen back splash, etc, and completely changed the interior looks. So much so, that it looked like a small cabin in the woods, not an rv, from the inside.
One of the things, (not the only one), that I am pressuring myself to do, is this....The shower is in use, less than 1/2 hr per day. As such, that is basically wasted space, the other 23.5 hours of the day.
So, why not put that space to work doing something else, something that is usable during the day, and easily movable for those few minutes, when we need a shower. Once that is over, let's go back to using that space for what we really need.
Perhaps your wife needs to see what "can be", instead of "what is".
A little like restoring an antique car, that has a lot of rust and doesn't run. It's not going to stay that way.
Keep us updated on your progress...and thank you.
If you want to do something, you will find a way.
If you don't, you will find an excuse.
-------------------------------------------------
Good judgement comes from experience.
A lot of experience, comes from bad judgement.