BarneyS wrote:
I can no longer recommend this product as it has failed on me twice. Not willing to give it a third chance. I think the next thing is going to be a RV Armor roof or the Hengs product. Oh well, I tried! :R
Barney
Hi Barney,
Bummer on your camper roof....
I'll pass along some info I have been investigating for my project campers and other folks I help along the way.
The RV Armor you linked is a very good product from everything I found. They give you both the product and the labor warranty. They come to you, and they do the work.
The same founder of RV Armor, Lee, has also developed a new DIY roofing product that they will guarantee for 50 years on the product. They have some tech service people and looking for more nation wide in the event someone needs help installing in case the RV owners do not and cannot do it.
This is the product, they market it separate from the RV Armor.
https://crazyseal.com/crazy-seal/I have called them and drilled them on the Crazy Seal to see if it checks all the boxes in place of doing a total reroof. The call was very good and the person I talked with knew her stuff. She has been with them from the development, to now commercialization.
They have 3 types of product that all bind together to create one total membrane. A pumpable caulk, a thicker brushable paste and the thinner top coat for the larger areas. Each for different areas on the roof.
I also learned some other things.
Eternabond. The Crazy Seal will not adhere to Eternabond. The white layer on top is too slick or something and it will not bond long term. You can use the Crazy Seal up to the edge of it, or put their repair tape over the Ebond and then seal over it, or lift up the Ebond and then coat over the area.
I also learned from seeing it myself on a friends roof, that the Dicor acrylic roof coat will not long term bond to Eternabond either. After a few years, it starts flaking off the top of the Eternabond.
Point being, for those of use who have used Eternabond on your roof, you have to use 1 of the 3 methods above to deal the the Ebond on at least 2 different types of roof coatings. Knowing this going in, you can create a work around.
I also quizzed the lady on the gutter rails and roofs that have a large radius wrap around at the edge at the gutter rails. Will the Crazy seal work on vertical surfaces? She stated the paste will work on vertical surfaces and not run down.
The gutter rail is an issue I feel needs to the addressed in a roof reseal. The vinyl screw strip cover is bad news, water gets behind it and rusts the screws out. Over time the more rust comes, water starts wicking in the sides of the camper. This is not a roof membrane problem, but it is a roof system problem.
This is what I am talking about on the gutter rail. This is my
T310SR in my sig back in 2010.
The awning side is worse then the non awning side, but both have the same problem. I have project camper after camper were water rots out the screws and gets into the roof system. I have more ugly pics of this if wanted.
Back in 2010 I create an Ebond treatment for the gutter rails that is still holding perfect today with 303 treatments on the roof. You eliminate the vinyl strip cover, change the screws to either pan head or flat head stainless, and using 4" Ebond, start from the bottom of the gutter and go up over the top onto the roof. There are tricks on how to do that, but it works.
The Ebond will solve the problem at the gutter rails as the newer roof coatings were not out back in 2010. Now, some of the new roof coatings will not bond long term to the Ebond, plus the Ebond is a lot of work and cost. But I still feel the gutter rail needs to be addressed in some fashion for those wanting to keep their camper a long time.
Now insert the Crazy seal paste. Get rid of the vinyl screw cover, change the screws if they are rusted on the threads or heads, then apply the Crazy seal paste from the bottom of the gutter up and over onto the roof. Then come back and seal the top roof area with the thinner coating. It will take a few days to do all this. Note: It is good to change out the hex screws even if they are still good with flat head to pan head. The sharp hex head edge over time start cutting through the E bond.
I am going to help a friend next spring if Covid tames down, to apply the Crazy seal on his big Jayco 5'er. Before then,(over the winter) I was going to build a mockup roof edge section with a gutter rail and prove out I can apply the Crazy Seal to do what I am talking about above. I will make about a 3 to 4ft section of roof edge, gutter, EPDM and all, and prove out the technique.
While I have no seam issues on our 16 year old camper in my sig, the EPDM is getting thinner and I will need a coating in the somewhat near future too. Plus, I may use the Crazy seal on some of my project campers verses doing a reroof.
The Crazy Seal will cost more then Hengs or Dicor acrylic talked about. Again, this comes back to warranty too. The Crazy seal is 50 years on the product, and if you sell the camper, the warranty transfers to the new owner.
In the end, this will come down to time, money and how long you want to keep the camper. At this point, I'm not sure I will ever sell our big Sunline. May buy another camper, but I am too attached to the Sunline.
Hope this helps.
John
2005 Ford F350 Super Duty, 4x4; 6.8L V10 with 4.10 RA, 21,000 GCWR, 11,000 GVWR, upgraded 2 1/2" Towbeast Receiver. Hitched with a 1,700# Reese HP WD, HP Dual Cam to a 2004 Sunline Solaris T310R travel trailer.