I discovered this summer that my 10 year old Starcraft Travelstar had some pretty bad water damage in the roof. The damage was confined to the last 2-3 feet of the roof (probably coming from the skylight), everything else looked pretty good for it's age. So I decided to replace just the last 4 feet of the roof.
I cut away the EPDM and underlayment, and replaced it with a new sheet of 1/4" plywood and new EPDM. The old EPDM was laminated well along the edge where I scored it, and I scored the new EPDM so that it butted up almost perfectly. After everything was glued down I covered the seam with 4" Eternabond tape. So far so good, and the hard part was done...
Yesterday I was preparing to put it away for the winter and I decided to seal along the edges of that Eternabond tape I had put down. I figured another layer of water protection wasn't a bad thing. I put it down kind of thick and narrow, so afterwards I used a putty knife to gently spread it.
Today I went out and discovered that along the edges of the Eternabond, where I applied the Dicor, the roof has a bunch of bubbles. The bubbles are all in the area where I applied the Dicor, but they are actually under the EPDM. In other words, the Dicor adhered well to the EPDM, but for some reason the EPDM seems to have separated from the underlayment.
Does anyone have any idea why this happened? Did the Dicor grab the EPDM, and cause it to separate from the underlayment as it was curing? Did moisture somehow get under there? (It hasn't rained lately.)
More importantly, how should I repair it?
Is it still water-tight, despite the bubbles? If so, can I leave it alone? I only want to get maybe 4 or 5 more years out of the trailer anyway.
Or, is the moisture barrier comprimised? In that case, do I have to peel back the EPDM in that area and repair? I *really* hope I don't have to do that. This has been a pretty frustrating project so far.
Photos below. It's hard to see the bubbles in the close-ups, but hopefully you get the idea.
Thank you in advance for your help.
-Mark