Danny wrote:Starleen2 wrote: "I used the 1/8 masonite on the first two builds. worked well until I got a leak and the stuff turned into mush!! " Starleen, did you seal all the surface area and the edges as well? Masonite must be protected like any other wood product.
I have used on the inside of a 20 inch radius. Pushed it up and she liked it.LOL Conformed right to the bend with no trouble at allteardrop_focus wrote:I like the idea of using masonite... but I have no real experience bending it to the sometimes-tight elipses used in some teardrop trailers.
We know that luan is easier bent perpendicular to it's length rather than it's width... and that kerfing anything will assist in achieving tighter curves... but how tight a curve can 1/8 masonite be bent to before it breaks?
Water penetrated from a seam in the roof line and collected on the back of the Masonite and wham
48Rob wrote:Water penetrated from a seam in the roof line and collected on the back of the Masonite and wham
If the roof leaked, it would have ruined whatever you used for a ceiling...no?
I have plans for a mini 76" 40 wide and masonite will be usedalffink wrote:Just a quick reminder, if you find a nice 50-60 year old TD on the road or stored in an old barn or such, look carefully at the construction.
If the surface had to bend....it was probably masonite, sometimes even if it didn't have to bend.
Now, they had to be repainted or Varnished at least everyother season, to remained sealed, if not it probably isn't around anyway.
Funny isn't, with all of the modern materials and products, in our search for the best or the lightest or a different way of doing things we stumble on something new that turns out to have been the way to do it, back in the begining.
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Not sure which poster you are answering. LOL2bits wrote:I used Masonite under the aluminum skin and used I think fours or five coats of CPES (Clean PENETRATING Epoxy sealer) to seal it. The word penetrating was the key for me because it penetrates. Then I used epoxy "fill-it" to connect and seal all the seams and edges. Here's a pic to show my radius.
Rob to me has an excellent point that any leak is bad and will require repair although mush is messier and more immediate than a plywood, the goal is seal the heck out of it.
Re reading your original post it seems that you are wanting the masonite to BE the outer layer. If going super cheap, I would go for the see through lexan roof, or Luan. Just me, I wouldn't trust masonite as my primary structure personally.
Saturday night..2bits wrote:Hey it's Saturday night! haha I was trying to answer the original post but then I realized it doesn't really apply to the situation, and I already wrote it all so since I already did all that work, I posted it LOL
Thank you for the positive comment tho, it is a Modernaire I finished it in aluminum...
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