โAug-03-2016 02:32 PM
โJul-24-2017 02:12 PM
ktnluvl wrote:slavco wrote:SLSAntigua wrote:
I found the leak!!! Water comes down the front of the RV, next to and over the front bunkend, over the diamond plate, where the diamond plate meets the floor in front of the hatch. The wood floor is practically visible. Water must have been saturating wood for years. The membrane on the under belly used to protect the wood actually trapped the moisture in. Rotted the wood to paper-thin flakes. have the front partially torn up down to that membrane.
Would it be smart to cover the membrane with some sort of aluminum sheeting? the front part will get coated with boat epoxy and I will install a 2x3 or 2x4 wood frame for a subfloor, then either use traffic master or pergo. fortunately wood under the slide is ok.
That's exactly where I had problems, although I'm not entirely positive that was the source of the leak, rather I believe this was just where the water would flow to and gather. This resulted in the front being completely rotted under the front bunk and where the pass-through storage is. I ended up replacing the front wall (behind the propane tanks) as well and then re-gluing the fileon to the new plywood.There's still a bit of delamination visible but it is MUCH better than it was. Most of all it's all water tight now and it's been dry even during the hardest rain storms. If you look at my pictures I posted earlier you'll see what I'm talking about.
I ended up supporting the trailer body frame on blocks and then dropping down the frame to just give me enough space to slide in a new piece of luan and tarp to cover the underbelly.I also laid a sheet of house wrap (stuff you get from Lowes or Homedepot) underneath. After the fact I think I should have only used the house wrap, that stuff is pretty strong and will keep water out.
Slavco - question for you. We just bought a Travel lite HTT and are having to replace the floors on it. Found the leak - it was at the front bottom seam where the pass-through storage compartment was. We are working on tearing up the flooring, etc., but I wasn't sure about that front wall behind the propane tanks...it looks like it's just a brown paper on the back piece. Does that need to be replaced or can we just clorox it, then fiberglass it or something? It doesn't look delaminated from the outside, but I can push on it and it flexes and you can see it flexing on the outside...I don't know if that's normal or not - we are first time noobs trying to figure everything out and VERY thankful for this forum! ๐ Any insight you have would be most helpful. Thank you!
โJul-22-2017 07:54 PM
mabynack wrote:Billbeat wrote:
I had a similar dilemma a few years back with my 2008 Coyote hybrid. I noticed a soft spot in the floor in the spring . I took up the vinyl flooring and the whole front of the trailer was rotted out. A quote from a dealer was about $4000.00. Way over my budget so I took on the repairs myself. Stressful , but I'm a little bit handy , got alot of advice from friends and online and it cost me about $150. Big job but I did it.
In a nutshell , if you think you can do the repair yourself it's worth it. To pay some one else , expensive but depending on your financial situation still may be less than buying a new trailer cus your not gonna get much for your water damaged one.
I found a 6 inch square soft spot in the floor of my travel trailer and figured I would tackle the repair myself. When I pealed back the vinyl flooring I realized that I needed to replace a section that was 4 x 4 feet. It was a lot more work than I had planned on and took me two weekends to finish. It wasn't all that expensive - just time consuming.
My problem was caused by a leaking water line, not a roof leak. It involved replacing the flooring under the kitchen cabinets.
โJul-11-2017 11:15 AM
slavco wrote:SLSAntigua wrote:
I found the leak!!! Water comes down the front of the RV, next to and over the front bunkend, over the diamond plate, where the diamond plate meets the floor in front of the hatch. The wood floor is practically visible. Water must have been saturating wood for years. The membrane on the under belly used to protect the wood actually trapped the moisture in. Rotted the wood to paper-thin flakes. have the front partially torn up down to that membrane.
Would it be smart to cover the membrane with some sort of aluminum sheeting? the front part will get coated with boat epoxy and I will install a 2x3 or 2x4 wood frame for a subfloor, then either use traffic master or pergo. fortunately wood under the slide is ok.
That's exactly where I had problems, although I'm not entirely positive that was the source of the leak, rather I believe this was just where the water would flow to and gather. This resulted in the front being completely rotted under the front bunk and where the pass-through storage is. I ended up replacing the front wall (behind the propane tanks) as well and then re-gluing the fileon to the new plywood.There's still a bit of delamination visible but it is MUCH better than it was. Most of all it's all water tight now and it's been dry even during the hardest rain storms. If you look at my pictures I posted earlier you'll see what I'm talking about.
I ended up supporting the trailer body frame on blocks and then dropping down the frame to just give me enough space to slide in a new piece of luan and tarp to cover the underbelly.I also laid a sheet of house wrap (stuff you get from Lowes or Homedepot) underneath. After the fact I think I should have only used the house wrap, that stuff is pretty strong and will keep water out.
โSep-18-2016 09:37 AM
โSep-16-2016 11:06 AM
SLSAntigua wrote:
Hi Slavco, How did you get the cabinets out? I did not know they were screwed from the otherside so unfortunately, I got pissed and tore the smaller one on the left side out in pieces only to discover it was installed from the other side, inside the hatch. talk about a project. your pictures are really giving me a good idea! thanks.
โSep-16-2016 10:44 AM
โSep-16-2016 10:20 AM
SLSAntigua wrote:
I found the leak!!! Water comes down the front of the RV, next to and over the front bunkend, over the diamond plate, where the diamond plate meets the floor in front of the hatch. The wood floor is practically visible. Water must have been saturating wood for years. The membrane on the under belly used to protect the wood actually trapped the moisture in. Rotted the wood to paper-thin flakes. have the front partially torn up down to that membrane.
Would it be smart to cover the membrane with some sort of aluminum sheeting? the front part will get coated with boat epoxy and I will install a 2x3 or 2x4 wood frame for a subfloor, then either use traffic master or pergo. fortunately wood under the slide is ok.
โSep-16-2016 08:46 AM
โSep-13-2016 07:58 PM
โSep-13-2016 04:14 PM
โSep-13-2016 06:11 AM
tode wrote:
Thank you all for the input. I am finished the roof. Replaced some wood and all new rubber. Cause was no tape under the shower skylight. Now I'm working on the floor. There is a lot of rot. Both front pass through doors and 1 marker light leaking. No tape under doors. Just a bead of caulk that has failed.
โSep-13-2016 03:59 AM
โAug-25-2016 02:41 PM
โAug-25-2016 06:19 AM