vreihen wrote:Playing devil's advocate, I was told by my trailer dealer that you should *never* seal both sides of a plywood floor. He said that the plywood needs to breathe, and every rotten floor in a CT that he's ever had to replace was because the owner tried to prevent the wood from rotting by sealing both sides. Don't know whether to believe him or not, but the floor in my car hauler is raw plywood underneath and painted inside from the Featherlite factory.....
Playing devil's advocate +1.....
I used to own a 25' plywood cabin cruiser. It was painted on the outside, and left raw on the inside. I was told the same thing, plywood needs to breathe and dry out by leaving one side uncoated. Also, I owned a Jayco Popup, it too had no coating on the underside.
I have been wondering about this for quite awhile. How much water does the underside of a trailer even see? What it sees dries quickly. The biggest problem is the plywood contact with the metal of the frame. If this area is protected from water staying between these surfaces, I think the open bare wood should not need any surface protection, which actually may be a cause of the rot.
How many very old plywood floored trailers have any coating on the bottom?
IMO the floor rot issues come from water getting into the walls through windows or doors and rotting the floors from the inside not the outside.
Not very scientific, just my opinion.....
Larry C