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Posted By: JIM Motor home repairs - 02/15/2019 01:03 PM
Well I 'm finally getting around to making repairs to the Motor home. Was trying to attach some custom made corners but there wasn't any solid material on the back wall. Got the fiberglass siding off without destroying it. there were a couple spots that didn't want to let go.
[Linked Image from farm8.staticflickr.com]
Most of the wood at the bottom half wasn't wood any more.
[Linked Image from farm8.staticflickr.com]
[Linked Image from farm8.staticflickr.com]

De-lamination is a common problem with old RVs and Quite a few new ones too.
[Linked Image from farm8.staticflickr.com]

I have a tarp securely fastened around the RV and connected to the jamb around my roll up door. Keep the space warm with an LP fired salamander. Wish I could throttle it down more. even on low with it open under the rig it'll cook me out in a few min. I open the roll up door to let the excess heat into the shop.
[Linked Image from farm8.staticflickr.com]

once I get it all cleaned up I can glue on some new lauan and put the siding back on. I'll replace the structural wood with treated lumber.
Any recommendations on a good adhesive that won't dissolve the Styrofoam in the wall?
Posted By: Doc Re: Motor home repairs - 02/16/2019 09:25 AM
Originally Posted by JIM

Any recommendations on a good adhesive that won't dissolve the Styrofoam in the wall?


Loctite PL300 "foam adhesive"

PL300

I don't envy you on the rebuild. One of my trailers is literally falling apart due to wood rot. When I bought it had a brand new door and ALL new double pane storm windows... but the idiots I bought it from did all that work on it without doing any repair of the rotten wood around the door frame. Shortly after I bought it I noticed the entire wall flexed when I closed the door. Began poking around and discovered all the rot.
Ah well, eventually (health permitting) I'll yank all the windows and junk the body. Then transfer the axles over to the big car trailer that has my 700gallon water tank on it.
Doc
Posted By: JIM Re: Motor home repairs - 02/16/2019 06:02 PM
This doubles as our guest house. I did a lot of work on it when I first got it from my folks back in 2001 rebuilt the wall on the drivers side from the floor down. Now I'm getting de-lamination all around.. Well crap it's only 31 years old.. Cheaper to rebuild it than buy a new one. Eventually I'm going to replace all the skin. or maybe we'll find a decent used one cheap but for now I'm just replacing the rotten wood. Patching cracks in the fiberglass and I think I'm going to paint it too.

Back of the RV and one panel scraped off this morning.
[Linked Image from farm8.staticflickr.com]
[Linked Image from farm8.staticflickr.com][

One to go. taking a break to go get lumber.
[Linked Image from farm8.staticflickr.com]
Posted By: Doc Re: Motor home repairs - 02/16/2019 09:12 PM
Here is MY guest room....TruckSleeper (sorry, but until I remember my photobucket password can only link to my gdrive accohnt, which flat refuses to display when linked.)
Anyway picked up the Kenworth sleeper for a mere $100. Is a double bunk. Small enough that a small Mr. Heater catalytic will keep it toasty in mid winter.
Doc
Posted By: sonny Re: Motor home repairs - 02/17/2019 12:24 AM
When they build campers, they try to keep weight down, but that kills the long life of them as well. They take a beating on the road too. also if used in winter the salt crap does a real number on them. In between the panels, they cant really dry out either. Saw one sell last spring, late model motorhome style, leaked all over, plus lots of other problems, and it only brought $1,000 and the guy bout went nuts! --- He ended up taking it back home.
I like Doc's hide-out!
Posted By: Doc Re: Motor home repairs - 02/17/2019 04:08 AM
Originally Posted by sonny
When they build campers, they try to keep weight down, but that kills the long life of them as well. They take a beating on the road too. also if used in winter the salt crap does a real number on them. In between the panels, they cant really dry out either. Saw one sell last spring, late model motorhome style, leaked all over, plus lots of other problems, and it only brought $1,000 and the guy bout went nuts! --- He ended up taking it back home.
I like Doc's hide-out!


Thanks. Just lucked into the sleeper. Got it so cheap due to a motivated seller who lost lease on buisiness location and had to move. Sleeper was among things that had to go in short time frame.

Am well familiar with trailer consruction. At the moment I own a remodled no name 40 footer, a 70s Shasta 28 foot, and two 17 foot. The roofs all leak except the 40 footer, which also has "Montana-ized" under floor insulation. As stated in previous post one 17 foot is junk from water damage, but has new double windows all around. I keep it tilted (hitch on ground) which keeps most additional water out. The others I keep tarped.

The only older trailers that never seem to leak are the airstreams. Basically aluminum roofs with no seams. The no name 40 footer I own is like that as well. The Shasta had FOUR roof vents, which is why it leaks. It will get a new, one piece thick vinyl billboard tarp roof after all vents are removed and flatened with solid inset plywood.... Yeah, I know trailers.
Doc .
Posted By: JIM Re: Motor home repairs - 02/18/2019 02:05 PM
MY tent around the back of the RV set up. Looking out the upstairs window of my shop. I'll put some pics up in the shop mods forum. I wish I had a pole barn right now but this is serving the purpose.
[Linked Image from farm8.staticflickr.com]
[Linked Image from farm8.staticflickr.com]

This is How I get in..
[Linked Image from farm8.staticflickr.com]

I spent most of the day yesterday milling lumber down to the proper dimensions for 1" thick wall. I neglected to take progress pics last night so I'll get some after work today. I hope to get the frame work done so I can set the plywood soon. I hope to get this wrapped up before the cheap HF tarp gives up the ghost on me.
Posted By: sonny Re: Motor home repairs - 02/18/2019 05:55 PM
Looks good! The old tarps will take a lot! I have a couple wrapped around my sawmill unit. It has to sit outside and the cheap tarps last a long time out in the weather!
Posted By: JIM Re: Motor home repairs - 02/19/2019 02:37 AM
PROGRESS REPORT

Got some of the new framing in today. I don't have a giant stapler like they use to build these things So I hade to Make it BETTER ….
Treated lumber.. probably last longer than the rest of the rig. Mending plates 1/4" crown staples and some lone exterior construction screws.
[Linked Image from farm8.staticflickr.com]
[Linked Image from farm8.staticflickr.com]
[Linked Image from farm8.staticflickr.com]
[Linked Image from farm8.staticflickr.com]
[Linked Image from farm8.staticflickr.com]
Posted By: JIM Re: Motor home repairs - 02/21/2019 01:28 AM
Frame work on back wall complete.. Now for the ply wood.
[Linked Image from farm8.staticflickr.com]
Posted By: sonny Re: Motor home repairs - 02/21/2019 01:49 AM
Look's like you are moving right along on it! Lookin good!
Posted By: JIM Re: Motor home repairs - 02/21/2019 01:55 PM
Yeah I wish the hitch wasn't welded to the frame though. It would be nice to fit the material around the frame rather than having to piece around the frame. Not too bad though. That will be pretty much hidden by the bumper. I plan on putting some kind of trim across the bottom to cover it up. I could take the bumper off but it wouldn't help me any wit the Hitch being welded to the frame.
Posted By: Doc Re: Motor home repairs - 02/21/2019 11:13 PM
Are you referring to the rear bumper? On my 28 foot Shasta the rear bumper is a hollow square tube with open ends big enough to hold a length of holding tank drain tube.
Doc
Posted By: JIM Re: Motor home repairs - 02/22/2019 03:24 AM
Originally Posted by Doc
Are you referring to the rear bumper? On my 28 foot Shasta the rear bumper is a hollow square tube with open ends big enough to hold a length of holding tank drain tube.
Doc

Yep... same thing.
Posted By: JIM Re: Motor home repairs - 02/24/2019 02:06 AM
OOPS knocked the panel over Now I'm revisiting my fiberglass skills.
[Linked Image from farm8.staticflickr.com]
[Linked Image from farm8.staticflickr.com]
[Linked Image from farm8.staticflickr.com]
These work great for small mixes.
[Linked Image from farm8.staticflickr.com]
[Linked Image from farm8.staticflickr.com]
Got the plywood up too.
[Linked Image from farm8.staticflickr.com]
[Linked Image from farm8.staticflickr.com]
The adhesive I used.. doesn't dissolve the foam.
[Linked Image from farm8.staticflickr.com]

Posted By: GatorS Re: Motor home repairs - 02/24/2019 03:18 AM
Looks like you made some good progress
Posted By: JIM Re: Motor home repairs - 02/24/2019 02:39 PM
I DID make some Good progress THANKS
Found this on line for the back corners. looks almost identical to the original stuff but it's twice as thick. I'll have to patient and go SLOW with the heat so I don't get wrinkles in the bends or burn the surface. Patience is the tough part for me though.

[Linked Image from farm8.staticflickr.com]
Posted By: sonny Re: Motor home repairs - 02/24/2019 06:25 PM
Lookin great! ---I know the "take your time" thing gets hard after a while. Slow and steady will pay off in the end!
Posted By: JIM Re: Motor home repairs - 03/10/2019 02:42 PM
Well Weather sucks so progress on the RV is slow but I Did get the panels repaired and a coat of paint on them. IH White turns out to be almost a perfect match for the original color of the RV. The fiberglass is so weathered that there's no buffing it out.
[Linked Image from farm8.staticflickr.com] [Linked Image from farm8.staticflickr.com]

Hope to make some headway today. warmer temps so I can glue the panels back on to the RV I HOPE....
Posted By: sonny Re: Motor home repairs - 03/10/2019 05:11 PM
Usually fiberglass is hard to work with after it gets weathered . Good deal that the paint matches!
The weather here is unsettled at best, goes from zero to 45 or so on a daily bases. The last two days we have wind in the 40 to 50 mph range, did a number on the rest of my machine shed door, so now instead of "fix", it will be make a different door!
Posted By: JIM Re: Motor home repairs - 03/11/2019 01:20 PM
Well I pulled the tarp off and moved the RV forward so I could clean up the mess that came off the back. Fit the bottom half of the siding in place, cut out the back window and put the tarp back up

[Linked Image from farm8.staticflickr.com] [Linked Image from farm8.staticflickr.com]
I put a total of 4 ratchet straps on to hold the panel in place while the adhesive sets. Not in picture. I didn't actually glue it all down until after I took the last pic.
[Linked Image from farm8.staticflickr.com]
Posted By: sonny Re: Motor home repairs - 03/11/2019 01:40 PM
Lookin good! ---- it takes time to do repairs. Looks like you have made a lot of progress!
Posted By: JIM Re: Motor home repairs - 03/12/2019 01:11 AM
Pluggin along.... too many irons in the fire all at once.
Posted By: JIM Re: Motor home repairs - 03/27/2019 01:57 AM
PROGRESS REPORT
All I have left on the back is the corner molding and trim.

[Linked Image from farm8.staticflickr.com]

[Linked Image from farm8.staticflickr.com]

WELL I'm Looking at the pics and just realized I put the right side lens on upside down.
Posted By: sonny Re: Motor home repairs - 03/27/2019 11:55 PM
Well, other than that it looks great! --- Better than new, I am sure!
Posted By: JIM Re: Motor home repairs - 04/01/2019 12:38 PM
Just about done with this project. waiting on a couple of trim tracks that needed replaced.[Linked Image from farm8.staticflickr.com]

[Linked Image from farm8.staticflickr.com]

This is the side I need the trim track for and the back just above the bumper.
[Linked Image from farm8.staticflickr.com]

Working on sanding the bumper. WIFE has decided we need to paint the bumpers black.
Posted By: JIM Re: Motor home repairs - 04/01/2019 01:14 PM
Black would give some contrast and sharpen things up.

[Linked Image from farm8.staticflickr.com]

[Linked Image from farm8.staticflickr.com]
Posted By: sonny Re: Motor home repairs - 04/01/2019 01:41 PM
That looks great! ----The bumpers painted black would look sharp! And I see you turned the tail light over!! I have put them in upside down before too! ---- I usually get in a hurry to put one in because I need to go someplace and don't watch which way I'm putting them in!
Posted By: bunkclimber Re: Motor home repairs - 07/13/2019 10:28 PM
nice work Jim,patience pays off..sometimes we all can't wait and it wears thin
Posted By: JIM Re: Motor home repairs - 07/16/2019 12:30 PM
Originally Posted by bunkclimber
nice work Jim,patience pays off..sometimes we all can't wait and it wears thin

Yeah that's my normal problem.. I still haven't painted the bumpers crazy
Posted By: JIM Re: Motor home repairs - 08/05/2019 12:21 AM
Got some paint on the back bumper today

[Linked Image from live.staticflickr.com] [Linked Image from live.staticflickr.com]
Posted By: sonny Re: Motor home repairs - 08/05/2019 01:00 AM
Hey!--That looks great!!
Posted By: JIM Re: Motor home repairs - 08/05/2019 01:03 AM
THANKS
Going to pull the front bumper Off to paint that.
Posted By: JIM Re: Motor home repairs - 08/11/2019 01:23 AM
ALL DONE ON THE BACK.
[Linked Image from live.staticflickr.com]
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