After several weeks of work, I am beginning to see progress. The weather has been not cooperating so I have been doing as much as possible in the garage. We did have a break in the weather last Friday & Saturday so I was able to go pick up wood & the aluminum.
On Friday I was able to get the wood replaced on the front & get the inside of my galley hatch skinned.
Saturday I was able to get all for the repair seams epoxied with cloth & I also skim coated the rest of the wood I replaced. I let it bake in the sun for a couple hours before I put it back in the garage with the heat on. By
Sunday morning it was ready to sand. I decided to fit my galley hatch back on Sunday afternoon & discovered had move after I skinned the inside & it would no longer close. It had "flattened out" 3/16 in length & was hitting on the floor.
So after lots of head scratching I came up with the solution while at work Monday. So Monday evening I decided to trim some material off the top edge of the hatch. No problem! Well it took 45 minutes to get the hatch hinge off without any damage. (good caulk) I set up a straight edge & with my trusty Skill saw I trimmed the hatch. I screwed the hinge back on (without caulk) and put the hatch back on the trailer for a fit. It closed great. I then noticed the the gap between the hatch & the side wall was not even over the entire length of the hatch. More head scratching.
Yesterday evening I decided to scribed the profile of the hatch on the sidewall & use my belt sander to "revise" the profile on the wall. After about a hour of sanding & fitting I now have a even gap.
Tonight the weather was great so I rolled the trailer out an glued the roof on.
A couple more week & I should be done with all my repairs & modifications.
Here are a couple pictures.
