Apr-24-2018 08:57 AM
May-21-2018 01:54 PM
May-19-2018 08:16 PM
Lynnmor wrote:That may certainly be a better method. Hard to say without images of the shower and drain plumbing. My drain connection for the trap underneath the shower pan is accessible from underneath. If there are glass panels and doors involved, it may be less time consuming to operate from underneath if it is only the drain fittings that are loose.westend wrote:
You will need to gain access from underneath the trailer. Remove a section of belly covering, perform the repair, and reinstall covering. I'd bet you will find a bit of wet insulation and moldy framing from the leak.
I would probably go the opposite way. Pull the shower surround and base, then build it back up like it should have been. The shower floor is a marginal piece of junk and can be replaced this way.
May-19-2018 06:05 PM
Lynnmor wrote:westend wrote:
You will need to gain access from underneath the trailer. Remove a section of belly covering, perform the repair, and reinstall covering. I'd bet you will find a bit of wet insulation and moldy framing from the leak.
I would probably go the opposite way. Pull the shower surround and base, then build it back up like it should have been. The shower floor is a marginal piece of junk and can be replaced this way.
May-19-2018 11:24 AM
westend wrote:
You will need to gain access from underneath the trailer. Remove a section of belly covering, perform the repair, and reinstall covering. I'd bet you will find a bit of wet insulation and moldy framing from the leak.
May-19-2018 10:37 AM
May-18-2018 06:07 PM
isonychia wrote:westend wrote:
Meh, small spuds. I have been remodeling and into different spaces for years. Replacing a few panels of flooring and pulling the wet insulation is easy. I would assume that pulling the under belly covering is one of the remediation steps. You want to make sure that any floor framing and flooring sheets are dry. Just from your descriptions, maybe it's possible to cut the fabric at the wall joint where it is wrapped, save the material, and reinstall it when done. Since this RV is parked, you won't have to worry about road grime and water entering while you're working on it.
How you schedule the completion of your project is up to you but I'd give it some thought and see how and what you need to transport to make it all better than new. In my work truck, I haul a complete set of tools and various hardware/fasteners so my workshop travels with me. If you're short on tools to make the job go easy and fast, seek out a friend or guy that has them for loan. Maybe you can even talk him into helping. If I was closer...
Here are a few things I'd plan to do: Find where the water is coming from. Remove bad flooring sheets. Remove any wet or compacted insulation. Treat wet spaces in floor framing with bleach/water. Dry floor and framing with fans. Install foam board in place of spun fiberglass. Replace OSB with floor rated plywood. Inspect and tighten all plumbing bits.
I'd very much suggest to do the interior pressure test. For me, nothing would be worse than repairing a floor only to find that there are other leak entrances, undiscovered. If I had to rent a blower to do it, I would.
Good luck with the floor. It will go quickly, once you start.
Well I think I found the source of the leak.
The shower drain was leaking.
Now the problem is how to replace the drain.
I purchased a new drain but I cant reach the nut that compresses the seal to the underneath of the shower pan/drain hole.
This is a corner shower with a rectangular access panel. The problem is there is an elevated floor board that the shower pan sits on. That is in the way of accessing the nut. I can reach the nut but it's impossible to gain any leverage to turn it.
We tried a drain wrench, but the drain strainer was corroded and broke.
I looked under the trailer and of course there is no access panel in the underbelly.
Again, a totally idiotic design.
The only thing I can think of is to cut a piece out of the floor board the pan sits on to expose the nut or go under the trailer and cut an access panel out of the underbelly.
The shower pan is sitting on a few pieces of 2x4 with the "floorboard" on top. It's really 2 sheets of luan with foam in the middle.
Thing is, how did the manufacturer expect anyone to service it?
Am I missing anything?
iso
May-16-2018 08:45 AM
westend wrote:
Meh, small spuds. I have been remodeling and into different spaces for years. Replacing a few panels of flooring and pulling the wet insulation is easy. I would assume that pulling the under belly covering is one of the remediation steps. You want to make sure that any floor framing and flooring sheets are dry. Just from your descriptions, maybe it's possible to cut the fabric at the wall joint where it is wrapped, save the material, and reinstall it when done. Since this RV is parked, you won't have to worry about road grime and water entering while you're working on it.
How you schedule the completion of your project is up to you but I'd give it some thought and see how and what you need to transport to make it all better than new. In my work truck, I haul a complete set of tools and various hardware/fasteners so my workshop travels with me. If you're short on tools to make the job go easy and fast, seek out a friend or guy that has them for loan. Maybe you can even talk him into helping. If I was closer...
Here are a few things I'd plan to do: Find where the water is coming from. Remove bad flooring sheets. Remove any wet or compacted insulation. Treat wet spaces in floor framing with bleach/water. Dry floor and framing with fans. Install foam board in place of spun fiberglass. Replace OSB with floor rated plywood. Inspect and tighten all plumbing bits.
I'd very much suggest to do the interior pressure test. For me, nothing would be worse than repairing a floor only to find that there are other leak entrances, undiscovered. If I had to rent a blower to do it, I would.
Good luck with the floor. It will go quickly, once you start.
May-02-2018 12:40 PM
May-02-2018 09:46 AM
westend wrote:Thanks for the info westend.
I already ordered 3 rolls of the tape and a new ac seal. I hope it's the 14x14 one.
To clarify. If my floor is composite, foam sandwiched between 2 sheets of plywood, is that simply sitting on top of the floor joists with the lower layer of plywood fastened to the floor joists?
I think my trailer is simply OSB with regular fiberglass insulation. One of the exterior hatches has a seal problem and water has gotten inside. When I was trying to fix it, (adding thicker foam weather stripping) I pulled back the carpeting and I could see the subfloor was simply OSB with fiberglass insulation underneath. So I assume thats how the rest of the floor is.
I also assume R13 insulation is what I should purchase to replace the existing?
A few more questions.
When I remove the sections of flooring how bad is it if I leave the sections under the refrigerator and kitchen sink if there is deterioration on those panels. Assuming I find the source of the leak and stop it?
There is a wall for the bathroom. I am not sure if I will be able to remove the plywood subfloor from under those wall sill plates. I figured I would cut around it if I need to. Is that ok?
Thanks,
iso
Different Mfgs have different ways of installing the floor. A composite panel floor is typiclly attached in a few spots to frame brackets, it is usually not installed like a typical frame-built floor, i.e. attached on 16" centers into joists. You may have a more conventional floor with wooden floor joists and OSB installed as the floor sheathing. The latter is easier to repair.
The under floor insulation will be your call as to refitting the same, installing new, or upgrading to an extruded polystyrene foam board. The price of insulation is so cheap that any of the three or combination of, will serve for you. My suggestion is that you put as much in as possible. More insulation = more comfort and less heating and cooling costs.
You can certainly cut the floor at locations that are easy to reach with conventional tools. You can always add small wood blocking or joist ledgers into the floor when reassembling your work. Fortifying those areas with wood placed into the "sandwich" will only make the floor stronger.
I cut my single 5/8" plywood floor back 6" from the exterior walls in most locations. This allowed me to install foam board pieces underneath the wall plates and under that 6" of plywood floor. When reassembling, I installed a piece of lumber underneath the cut line to support both pieces of plywood, the one remaining (6") and the larger piece removed. In one area, where there was extensive wall rot and the plywood was non-existant under the wall plate, I chipped out the bad plywood, cut nails and screws in the way with sawzall and small grinder, slid the new plywood under the wall, and reattached through a sound wall plate.
FWIW, I spent two weeks, close to 80 hrs. cutting and fitting foam board into wall and ceiling cavities. No cavity was plumb or straight so each piece was measured and custom cut, also allowing for electrical boxes and wire runs. I saw pink spots for a few days, lol. The end result of my efforts was a trailer that is like no other when seated inside. There is very little exterior noise (if windows and doors are shut) and it takes quite a bit less heat or A/C to get comfortable. Insulation in trailers rules, the more you can get into the trailer and the precision that you use if using foam board, pays big dividends going forward.
Good luck on the floor, once you dive into it, you will understand what needs to be done.
Apr-27-2018 03:43 AM
Apr-26-2018 03:15 PM
Thanks for the info westend.
I already ordered 3 rolls of the tape and a new ac seal. I hope it's the 14x14 one.
To clarify. If my floor is composite, foam sandwiched between 2 sheets of plywood, is that simply sitting on top of the floor joists with the lower layer of plywood fastened to the floor joists?
I think my trailer is simply OSB with regular fiberglass insulation. One of the exterior hatches has a seal problem and water has gotten inside. When I was trying to fix it, (adding thicker foam weather stripping) I pulled back the carpeting and I could see the subfloor was simply OSB with fiberglass insulation underneath. So I assume thats how the rest of the floor is.
I also assume R13 insulation is what I should purchase to replace the existing?
A few more questions.
When I remove the sections of flooring how bad is it if I leave the sections under the refrigerator and kitchen sink if there is deterioration on those panels. Assuming I find the source of the leak and stop it?
There is a wall for the bathroom. I am not sure if I will be able to remove the plywood subfloor from under those wall sill plates. I figured I would cut around it if I need to. Is that ok?
Thanks,
iso
Apr-26-2018 10:17 AM
budwich wrote:
OP... go from the underside of things. Get a 1 in. forstner bit and drill a "inspection hole" into the bottom "flooring" beit what it is... ie. if its a sandwich, only do about 1/4 in for the lower layer... or otherwise. Do the drill depth slowly. This will give you an opportunity to see if there is wetness or otherwise (ie. continuous load pressure weakening the foam if it is). Then you can decide on further action once you understand what you are up against.
Apr-26-2018 09:42 AM
Apr-26-2018 09:33 AM
westend wrote:isonychia wrote:The pressure test introduces a large volume of air into the interior of the structure (accomplished with various blowers) and a soap solution is sprayed onto the exterior, including the roof. Any pinhole or void will bubble up readily.westend wrote:
It sounds like leak prevention has been an afterthought. I'd suggest to do an interior pressurized leak test. That will reveal any structural leaking. You can check plumbing supplies and drains by operating them. Check tightness of plastic drains while you're there.
An afterthought? Not really.
An uneducated rv person, yes.
I assume the pressurized leak test is for the plumbing system?
I have been on the roof a few times and visually inspected all the lap sealant etc. I have never noticed any problems. However, if subtle pinholes can let in that much water, than that is something I cant prevent. In which case people should not bother inspecting all the seams on a TT roof and just keep putting on loads of lap sealant every year.
Everytime I look at these seams it's impossible to tell if there are any pinholes. Between the bumpy texture of the lap sealant and dirt that covers things, pinholes can easily get unnoticed. Even after cleaning the seams it's tough to tell.
The system these companies use to build these things is horrible.
These TT have flat roofs, with a rubber membrane and there are 10 items penetrating the roof, antennae's, vents, AC units, solar panels, ladders etc etc. It's just a combination for a disaster.
To make matters worse, they use luan roof panels, OSB subfloors and wood framing.
I understand it's the nature of things, it's just a little annoying to try and prevent leaks when the system is not designed well.
I take all the precautions I know how. I cant prevent them all if I cant see the problems. I visually inspect the inside of the trailer and always feel the walls and floors for any signs of wetness or softness. Thats how I found out the water heater drain plug flange lets water in from the outside.
If pipes running underneath the subfloor have sprung a small leak and are wetting the subfloor, thats impossible to find. It's hidden.
The AC thing is definitely my fault. After some researching I didn't know they were a major source of water problems. I didn't know I was supposed to tighten the bolts to make sure they have not come loose. (I don't move the trailer, it's static)
I didn't know I need to dismantle it, remove it from the roof and check the seal to see if it needs to be replaced. Now I do.
iso
I understand your opinions on the membrane roofs. IMO, they aren't a good solution to a transported house. They do require continued maintenance unless......you discover Eternabond tapes. The tapes are time consuming to install because the surface needs to be immacuately clean (think solvent clean) but, after installation, they guarantee a leak-less seam. There are many on this Forum that advocate for Dicor lap sealant, preferring to add some over existing seam sealant. They report no leaks so both systems have adherents.
The AC seal is what it is. If the gasket is observable to be intact and your confience is up, you could try tightening the bolts. I'd opt to remove the bolts, pull the AC and install a new gasket. Age does have her ways.
Getting back to the flooring issue: A composite panel floor made from a sandwich of plywood sheathing and foam is a disaster waiting to happen. The interior plywood sheathing is not rated for floor use so any loosening of the foam to the plywood skin results in a failure of the panel. These composite panels are good for walls and roof applications but fail as floor systems. The repair is to remove interior faced plywood and flooring, exposing the foam (or what remains of it intact), installing a filler that will adhere to the new plywood floor sheathing replacement (typically spray foam). Install new flooring.
If you're blessed with a conventional floor rated floor sheathing attached to floor joists, repair is much easier. Flooring is removed, plywood is examined for failure and replaced as needed. Any damage to floor joists from water leakage or rot can be replaced or ledgered from the interior.
FWIW, after I removed the carpet inside my trailer, I ended up cutting the plywood sheathing out to both repair rot damage in two areas and to install foam board in the empty joist cavities.
The under belly of my trailer is a continuous aluminum skin, it provides excellent water shedding.
If you have an assumed plumbing leak or need to inspect the floor from beneath the trailer, both Coroplast or spun fabric can be removed and reinstalled. A search of the Forum should turn up a lot of hits and tips.
Again, I'd suggest to pressurize the interior to locate any or all leaks. Some guys do it with a leaf blower. I use a conventional furnace blower that I mount on a ladder and blow through a removable sash opening in a vinyl window. If this Forum was more friendly about "stickying" instructions for some of these maintenance procedures, I'd capture the process and submit it. I just got tired of listing the whole process. Maybe a search will find one of those threads.
Good luck on finding the leaks and repairs. You're not alone with this. 😉