Katysdad & Dougrainer,
Thank you both for responding. Much appreciated.
Doug, some comments here,
dougrainer wrote:
1. OEM's install the TPO before the caps. From your pic, it appears they cut the front of the TPO very short. MOST OEM's install the TPO at least 5 inched under the caps. This helps prevent ANY air intrusion on the hiway that gets into the cap from billowing up the TPO.
Yes, you are right about the older traditional way to tuck 5 to 6" of the membrane under the front siding fastened to the rafter/front wall on purpose. That older method is the way all my older camper restorations were done and what I do/have done on all my roof repairs. There also was a method of butyl tape in this front wall joint on the older way of doing this front joint. It took more time and more materials though. These steps:
1. Butyl on top of membrane to the bottom of the front siding to seal the top of the membrane to the bottom of the siding.
2. More butyl on top of the joint between the top of the siding and the top of the membrane under a flat screwed down cap molding. -
3. Then, lap sealant as the final seal over the screw heads and the molding to the siding and membrane.
This particular Keystone setup is different.
A. The membrane is not under the front wall, it is over it.
B. Butyl or other sealants to mimic step 1 above are not present. There is no sealant between the membrane and the front cap.
C. There is a minor amount of butyl tape under the flat cap molding holding the membrane down over the cap and the 2nd molding over the membrane behind the cap. The butyl is narrow and thin, not sure it will seal the screw threads much, but it was there.
D. They pumped a large qty. (gobs) of lap sealant over most of the two flat moldings. The last 8 to 10" on each end of the flat molding that goes down the side wall had a vinyl screw cover on them and silicone over the gap between the two moldings and to the front cap. The lap sealant at the rear of the 2nd molding to the TPO was lacking to touch the molding. And the vinyl screw cover was not sealed to the molding. Here is the one pic I have as found before I was contacted to help a year ago.
On last years caulk check, I added extra lap sealant on the back side of the molding to the TPO as the original was shrinking away from the molding. The vinyl screw cover is as original from the OEM. I also added extra non sag lap sealant on the top of the gutter rail as what was there was so thin some places shrunk open.
This is my first Keystone or other brand, with a front one piece fiberglass cap to work on, so I am not sure what is current day industry practice. All of my restorations so far are on aluminum sided campers or the older filon front walls which sealed about the same on this front wall to roof joint. Those older campers can & will fail/leak on the front seam if the owner does not stay on top of the caulking checks, but there was a better sealing process in my mind to have a chance of lasting longer as long as the lap sealant was under constant maintenance. And there is no vinyl screw cover used as a main roof seal.
I'm not sure how the rest of the industry does this front joint with a one piece cap, or if Keystone had a bad day on the line, but I can see how this particular camper can leak as the camper ages even if the lap sealant is intact. Is what we see on this one 2018 build Keystone 5er what the rest of the industry follows? Have you seen these practices a lot?
dougrainer wrote:
2. Your comments about the Staples. Jayco years ago had such issues. They installed too short of staples to hold the roof deck wood and any radius on the corners. After a few months in operation, the staples lifted up and caused the TPO to also slightly release. Jayco's fix was twofold. IF close enough to the radius or corner edge, we remove the rail and gently lifted up the TPO to remove those staples and either uses countersink screws or longer staples and then installed Gorilla tape over the staples and countersunk screw small craters to allow a smooth surface when reattaching the TPO. IF the customer objected to this fix, Jayco paid us to replace the TPO and overlay the decking and use screws. ONLY problem was, You HAD to notice this in Jayco's 2 year warranty. OUT of warranty, some Jayco customers did get some help.
Thank you for sharing this, it helps back up my concept for the repair. In this case, Keystone did not put butyl tape on the gutter rail or the TPO to the siding on the full length of the camper. Not sure if they missed it, or this is the current day practice. They only used a small amount of butyl tape on the gutter rail at the front cap joint. They did place a marginal, amount of lap seal on the top 1/8" edge of the gutter rail to the TPO the full length of the camper, but that is all that seals the gutter area. It appears they are counting on the vinyl screw cover to keep the water from wicking down the screw threads into the attic over time when the gutter gets flooded.
I did not bring this up, but the rear wall molding joint to the TPO has/had issues too with the use of an exposed vinyl screw cover to seal the screws. These pics are from last year when I did a caulk check for the neighbor. I saw the use of a vinyl screw cover on the roof molding. Again, not sure if this is standard practice or a bad day on the assembly line.
I removed the vinyl screw cover as I know they can wick in water. There is only one way dirt gets under this cover, water and dirt wicks in and then flows by gravity to the corners.
The left rear corner joint as found, the right side had the same problem. The TPO has shrunk away from the rear wall molding and exposed a joint. Roof membrane shrinkage is common, but if you have a larger overlap of lap sealant, your joint has better odds of holding until the roof maintenance check comes along.
A close up to see the shrunk joint.
I did address and repair the rear wall transition last year. The use of the vinyl screw cover as a water seal is no longer used. Went old school, cleaned all the dirt out and caulked the screw channel.
If the above methods we see are standard day practice, it seems to point to a cost reduction effort to reduce labor and materials to the bare minimum on how to seal up a camper. I hope this is not the new way in the industry. The old way with counting on lap sealant and butyl as your means of roof leak protection is bad enough. Maybe I'm biased as I deal with water damage all the time, but the method on this 5er setup does not add up to a long lasting method for a leak free roof system even while doing constant roofing caulk checks.
dougrainer wrote:
3. Did your customer take it in to the Keystone service center to see if they would give some consideration? Doug
In this roof leak and TPO lift case, no, they did not take the camper to a Keystone service center. They felt they would not get much help on a 3 year old claim and a reported roof leak by an independent repair person.
Early on after they started using the new camper when Covid started, they tried to get to a dealer for minor new camper warranty work. Major items in their mind, minor in shop work to correct though. The selling dealer and the rest in our area were slammed with work and still are. It would be months before they could get in, if they even could. During that time, they reached out to Keystone direct, in this case about the fresh tank siphoning out water going down the road, and they hit a brick wall. So, they approached me back then if I could just correct the warranty issues for them as they could not get in at a dealer and I did the corrections for them. Most all the items on the list was sloppy work at the factory other then the fresh tank siphoning issue that is a somewhat industry issue with the new fresh water pressure tank fill systems. The older gravity fills with tank vents way up high did not have this problem, like their older 5er that never had an issue, but here on their new camper, they loose 50% of the water in the tank before they reach the campsite.
I'll post in the next reply on my approach for the TPO lift for comment.
Thanks again,
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.