10forty2 wrote:
hdrichards wrote:
......but I am having a difficult time as my knees are bad and I can't get on them to scrub.
Might be worth your while to pay a young, lightweight teenager to climb up there and scrub it for ya. I'd think for $40 you would probably get a pretty good cleaning job out of it.
The first thing you'd have to do is break that "young lightweight, teenager" away from his "I-PHONE, VIDEO GAME, GET HIM OUT OF BED BY 10:00 A.M., CUT HIS HAIR SO HE COULD SEE WHAT HE'S DOING,(sorry, did I say that?) and a lot more.
I used to do a ton of things when I was little (a few zillion years ago) to earn extra (any) money for myself, i.e. mow lawns, pull weeds, trim bushes, paint, wash cars, and much, much more. When was the last time you (or anyone on here) has seen ANY teen agers ACTUALLY WORKING to earn money?
So OP, got a bit off track here. On our previous coach, a '99 Fleetwood Bounder 34V, the rubber roof was well over 10 years old and, the white part had all but, worn off. Needless to say, it was about 75-85% black. Well, we all know what a black roof represents, HEAT!
So, long story short, I scrubbed it with bleach and some good dish soap with a good, stiff brush. That got it fairly clean. I then purchased the Dicor roof treatment from Camping World. It had/has it's own special cleaner/prep in the kit. You put it on with a Hudson Garden sprayer and, let it sit for short, recommended time then, YOU PRESSURE WASH IT OFF, YES I SAID PRESSURE WASH.
Then, two coats of the Dicor treatment and you get this:
Scott
![](http://i479.photobucket.com/albums/rr159/FIRE-UP1/coatedroof.jpg)