โDec-10-2009 06:16 PM
โMay-13-2010 11:51 AM
pianotuna wrote:
Hi,
Why not just go with Eternabond. It can be ordered in fairly wide widths. It's really an amazing product!
should I go back with the metal or will the rubber roof work.? Thanks.
โMay-13-2010 10:41 AM
โMay-13-2010 10:14 AM
โMay-12-2010 07:43 PM
โMay-11-2010 08:53 PM
โMay-11-2010 02:15 PM
โMay-11-2010 02:08 PM
john b wrote:
I admire your progress and ingenuity on your project as it is starting to come together. A 2 cents contribution if allowed.I have soldered wiring in all phazes of rv & general automotive wiring and it is very reliable & cost effective when done correctly with the proper products.I have even in the right circumstances soldered and then shot the appropriate size wire nut full of silicone and installed it for a tight weather resistant connection with integrity When you see the scotch connectors etc they have used for years in RV manufacturing with a very high failure rate makes soldering look ike a well planned savior for reliabilty & longivity.
Also any thing you use with sticky tape on it usually doesn't stand up to the heat in an Rv so to use those types of wire hangars seems to be it could be another weak link. We have witnessed many so applied devices fall down in mid summer,I sure wouldn't want that to happen inside a wall or something. Just my 2 cents & keep up the good work.IMHO
โMay-11-2010 01:30 PM
John H wrote:I was thinking the same thing myself, In fact I did some test on this and thats what I come up with too, As long as it is done right the soldered splice would work fine, I will be using Solder and sealing them with this liquid tape and everything should out last the new wood.
Hello trucker,
In all of my soldering connectors have never had one break at the connector. In any type of connector between wiring is to assure a solid joint, not raising resistance, thus assuring a unimpeded current flow. Soldering does this. Now I can see the resemblance between the boating industry and the RV industry. But also believe since I am a boater also, I believe that the sever conditions in which a boat goes threw is far and away more than an RV undergoes. If I, or you for that matter, was to tint the two sides of a multi-strand wire, then complete the soldering of the two sides, then to seal that joint against moisture intrusion. I would then wonder how many times we would have to vigorous rotated those two wires to get the soider joint connection to break at that connection, before the multi-wire strands wire would start to give. In this I would wager far, far more than any RV would undergo in several life times. Now there are right ways and wrong to soider a joint, just as in most ways of doing things, and of course as always the course & the ways and means of getting there is your chose. I would never never give you any eroneous information, to lead you down a path of destruction, no not to you or anyone, but there are always newer and just maybe sometime better ways of doing things.
Other then this your project is starting to come together pretty good, showing all of your sweat & planning into a complete project.
โMay-11-2010 01:22 PM
tboss wrote:
hey driver It looks like in the second pic you have this thing tied to a cement block,,,,You aint expecting it to go somewhere are you ,,,Im just saying....
โMay-11-2010 11:18 AM
โMay-10-2010 07:05 PM
โMay-10-2010 10:19 AM
โMay-10-2010 10:10 AM
โMay-09-2010 07:37 PM
โMay-09-2010 12:02 PM