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GENECARP 08-14-2013 09:00 PM

Heads Up
 
Just a quick heads up, my Rig built by Silver Crown 2009 has always had a roof detail that concerned me. https://www.truckconversion.net/attac...7ed10dcc14.jpg the perimeter has always held water, I have seen this detail on Renegades and several other Truck Conversions. My rig holds water in two areas, this past weekend I came into a wet carpet in the bedroom, I don't care how good a sealent is standing water will always find a way. So I installed a couple of drains this past weekend that I put off long enough. I set a drain in the roof flush, 1-1/2" PVC, then elbowed through the sidewall. Went through a good rain, drains worked well, STREAM shooting out the PVC and off the roof. On one of the drains I am installing a diverter and in line filter to fill my fresh water holding tank.....check your roofs, more photos to follow....

hot rod 08-14-2013 10:00 PM

My Pace trailer is exactly the same way. My problem is at the rear, the roof sheet metal seems to flex vs. the aluminum perimeter trim eventually cracking every kind of sealer I have tried. I like your drain idea. That would work in the problem area of my trailer. I'm looking forward to see how you did it where the drain is flush enough to drain everything. Good idea!

GENECARP 08-15-2013 03:48 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by hot rod (Post 41608)
My Pace trailer is exactly the same way. My problem is at the rear, the roof sheet metal seems to flex vs. the aluminum perimeter trim eventually cracking every kind of sealer I have tried. I like your drain idea. That would work in the problem area of my trailer. I'm looking forward to see how you did it where the drain is flush enough to drain everything. Good idea!

Next time up there (next weekend) I will take a few photos of the drain......for now the quick explanation.....everything is 1-1/2" PVC SCH 40..... I used a shower/tub drain, I removed trim cover, the actual drain thickness that sits on the roof is about 1/16" the drain bottom fits nicely into the inside of the 1-1/2" PVC, I ran a bead of PL adhesive before twisting it into the PVC. So at this point I have the drain set into the PVC pipe, total length about 14". Drilled a 1-1/2" hole through the roof, I drilled two small 1/16" holes through the face of the drain, ran a bead of dicor self leveling caulk around the underside of the drain, set into roof, use two screws to fasten drain from top, caulk oozes out....one 90 degree elbow inside the trailer , line up the hole in the sidewall, drill another 1-1/2" hole in the sidewall, send a piece in from the outside, connect to elbow. From the inside use a stainless collar to finish the look of the pipe going through the wall. On the exterior run a bead of caulk around the pipe as it exits the trailer, there should be about 1" protruding....to finish the exterior you can add another collar or in boating stores they make a clamshell cover that can go over the pipe and conceal it at the same time...again I will follow up with photos....Finish with a bead of self leveling around the drain on the roof covering the two screws....Gene.

GENECARP 08-15-2013 03:53 PM

One more thing, the caulk detail around the perimeter is about 3/4" high, so the water holding was at least 3/4" deep, the drain with the self leveling caulk is about 1/4". + - . So the puddle now being so shallow evaporates very quickly , before it sat and seeped for days...


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