7sparky7 wrote:I may have screwed up by not getting my entry door scooted toward the back a little bit. Now I’m wondering how I will be able to mount the support arms for an awning to the right-hand side of my entry door. Any thoughts?

That might be a tricky one, Sparky.
Your standard RV awning, Carefree and A&E etc. have a rail that is mounted to the top edge of the face of the roof/wall trim. The vinyl material spline slides into that rail, and the roller and arms pivot away from roof to deploy. So the arm and roller are outside or wider than the material approx. 6in.. So you would need to fab a triangular piece to extend the bottom frame rail, in order to mount lower arm support. But then there is nothing to support the arm and roller in the closed/transport position. There is usually some sort of arm lock to prevent accidental deploy while in transit. So maybe another triangular extender at midpoint somewhere to lock the arm to and possibly a third at roof/roller height. Kinda fugly and cludgy but a possible work around.
Or, you can look into the "bag awning" style. Still cludgy and fugly, but they work. Here is a example PDF.
http://www.carefreeofcolorado.com/documents/Campout.pdfOr, you can do what I did. A "folding or retractable awning". Here is the PDF.
https://secure.img1.wfrcdn.com/docresou ... 274736.pdfAnd a pic. or two.








I paid 146.00 shipped for 10' x 8'. It has a crank to open and close and the roller is stationary. The arms are spring loaded and you can open to any position. The angle is also adjustable. I had to fab some mounts and will probably do a rev. B soon so as to be less fugly. But it works great. I love it. You can get or make support rods to attach to the leading edge, but I have not needed them so far. I made a cover from vinyl gutter and end caps to keep it out of the UV and bird poop when not deployed and reduce the 80mph wear and tear. Zero complaints so far.
So there are a few options, and of course never take No for an answer... just sayin'
McDave