May-02-2016 06:35 PM
May-03-2016 01:04 PM
May-03-2016 12:57 PM
May-03-2016 11:15 AM
May-03-2016 10:12 AM
edatlanta wrote:
I had a EPDM roof that was properly maintained, not damaged, caulked frequently, etc. and at 5 years service the membrane started failing. Moisture was leaking through the membrane. This is obviously an expensive issue and the 12 year rubber roof warranty that all manufacturers advertise is totally worthless. Try to make a claim and see how far that gets you.
SoundGuy wrote:
A misstatement of fact. The 12 yr roof warranty is on the membrane itself, not the trailer roof, and is not offered by "all manufacturers" but rather by the membrane manufacturer which in the majority of cases will be Alpha Systems. If your rubber roof membrane was thinning to the point where it was leaking before the 12 yr mark any claim would have had to have been made to the manufacturer of the membrane.
Bumpyroad wrote:
sort of picking nits here aren't we? it still boils down to an EPDM roof sucking.
May-03-2016 10:11 AM
May-03-2016 09:25 AM
SoundGuy wrote:edatlanta wrote:
I had a EPDM roof that was properly maintained, not damaged, caulked frequently, etc. and at 5 years service the membrane started failing. Moisture was leaking through the membrane. This is obviously an expensive issue and the 12 year rubber roof warranty that all manufacturers advertise is totally worthless. Try to make a claim and see how far that gets you.
A misstatement of fact. The 12 yr roof warranty is on the membrane itself, not the trailer roof, and is not offered by "all manufacturers" but rather by the membrane manufacturer which in the majority of cases will be Alpha Systems. If your rubber roof membrane was thinning to the point where it was leaking before the 12 yr mark any claim would have had to have been made to the manufacturer of the membrane.
May-03-2016 08:59 AM
May-03-2016 04:23 AM
edatlanta wrote:
I had a EPDM roof that was properly maintained, not damaged, caulked frequently, etc. and at 5 years service the membrane started failing. Moisture was leaking through the membrane. This is obviously an expensive issue and the 12 year rubber roof warranty that all manufacturers advertise is totally worthless. Try to make a claim and see how far that gets you.
May-03-2016 03:58 AM
Bumpyroad wrote:gat75 wrote:
I think you will find that there are practically nothing but TTs with rubber roofs available. Fiberglass would be more durable, you just gonna have a hard time finding fiberglass on anything but MH roof.
lots of small TTs with fiberglass roofs. I wouldn't have another rubber one myself.
bumpy
May-03-2016 03:48 AM
May-03-2016 03:46 AM
rbpru wrote:One too many...
Airstreams and the "eggs" like Casita are the only none membrane roofs I can think of.
The industry makes 300,000 TT and Fiver "rubber" roofs a year. How many do you think leak?
May-03-2016 03:41 AM
gat75 wrote:
I think you will find that there are practically nothing but TTs with rubber roofs available. Fiberglass would be more durable, you just gonna have a hard time finding fiberglass on anything but MH roof.
May-02-2016 10:34 PM
gat75 wrote:
I think you will find that there are practically nothing but TTs with rubber roofs available.
May-02-2016 08:34 PM
May-02-2016 07:24 PM
#1nobby wrote:Cajun Bill wrote:
Was recently posting on the TC blog about switching out of my fiver to a TC, but with the help of those on that blog, I decided that a more fitting camper for me would be a TT. Now, just curious, is there a consensus regarding what type of roof is better and more resistant to UV and leaks, i.e. fiberglass, rubber, aluminum? The fact is that my next camper, just like my present one, will never be covered so I'm looking to see what peeps think will be the best able to handle the elements under my circumstances?
I'm new to Rving and I have a 21 ft. TT. It has a rubber roof. I think it's stupid and just waiting to fail.
But, for some reason....the majority of RVs have them. ???