Nov-29-2011 03:46 PM
Dec-01-2011 05:19 PM
Dec-01-2011 05:05 PM
alpenliter wrote:
Barney, I forgot to tell you one important thing. Mixing the Liquid Roof and the catalyst
. The consistency of Liquid Roof is not honey like, more like warm tar. I bought a new 1/2" drill at Walmart and a 4" paint paddle to mix the ingredients. Within seconds of starting to mix it, smoke was pouring out of the drill case. I stopped before I fried it so I could return it. I then went to a rental place and rented a heavy duty mixer that actually clamps to the side of the 5 gallon bucket. It mixed it without breaking a sweat. Well worth the expense. Also, if I were to do it over again, I would have purchased one gallon separately to do the cut ins around the vents, AC and the edges. That took me two hours to do, which only allowed me a few hours to do the rest. The squeegee business didn't work for me, because I had too large of one, a 9" would be the maximum size. Good luck with your project!
Dec-01-2011 03:59 PM
Dec-01-2011 01:37 PM
Dec-01-2011 12:53 PM
BarneyS wrote:
Larry,
Thank you for your post. I had not given that any thought at all. I had planned on removing the air conditioner shroud and all the covers over my vents etc. Not sure it will be a concern but if it is I will remove the air conditioner, fasten some thin plywood strips around the opening to raise it up a bit, cover them with Eternabond, and then paint the Liquid Roof on.
The directions for the Liquid Roof product say to make the coating 20mils thick. I don't think that will cause any pooling problems but we'll see. I may give them a call before I tackle the project. Their videos did not mention it either. I appreciate your post! Hope this helps the OP also. 🙂
Rvusa,
The videos show the installers pouring the product on the roof and then smoothing it with both a squeegee and a short nap roller. I will probably just use a brush to go around the edges and vents etc. and then a roller for the rest of the job. The product is supposed to have about a 4 hour working time after mixing in the catalyst. That should be plenty of time to do my 30 foot trailer. It kind of looks like the consistency of honey in the videos and is supposed to be self leveling.
Barney
Dec-01-2011 09:12 AM
Queens Carriage wrote:Do you mean Bus Kote? Check with your local school district to see how well it holds up on their school buses.
Just found out about another product called Bus Cote. Has anybody ever used it or heard of it?
Dec-01-2011 07:34 AM
Dec-01-2011 04:38 AM
Dec-01-2011 12:08 AM
alpenliter wrote:LarryJM wrote:BarneyS wrote:
I have 5 gallons of Liquid Roof sitting in my truck and will be put on my roof just as soon as we get down to Florida.
Barney
What do you plan to do for the A/C since building up the roof around the A/C without removing the lower shroud and the entire A/C will create a pool type ridge around the A/C gasket that would be subject to pooling and possible leaks and the drain holes in the lower shroud are very close to the gasket as shown below.
Larry
Larry, that concerned me too, so I used the Liquid Roof and built a "dam" around the outside. So far no leaks. If I do find that it leaks, I will pull the AC and take the appropriate action.
Nov-30-2011 04:39 PM
LarryJM wrote:BarneyS wrote:
I have 5 gallons of Liquid Roof sitting in my truck and will be put on my roof just as soon as we get down to Florida.
Barney
What do you plan to do for the A/C since building up the roof around the A/C without removing the lower shroud and the entire A/C will create a pool type ridge around the A/C gasket that would be subject to pooling and possible leaks and the drain holes in the lower shroud are very close to the gasket as shown below.
Larry
Nov-30-2011 04:21 PM
BarneyS wrote:
I have 5 gallons of Liquid Roof sitting in my truck and will be put on my roof just as soon as we get down to Florida.
Barney
Nov-30-2011 04:08 PM
Nov-30-2011 03:34 PM
Nov-30-2011 03:18 PM
Nov-30-2011 01:44 PM