I would think that a well built, aluminum clad trailer is, at the very least, a 20 year product without any additional sealing or application of various goops.when I first started looking at finding/building a teardrop I stared looking at what fails and in order it is wood and steel. Current trailers/RV's are for the most part no better built than the Santa Fe, and they fail.
a 20 year product without any additional sealing or application of various goops
of course I took maintenance and, necessary, repair into account when I made my statements. The additional goops and sealants that I spoke of was refering to something that might be done during assembly, at the factory, rather than re sealing as a part of general maintenance. We have a 1989 Layton fifth wheel, built as I described, with sticks and staples. It has held up well, but I do have to check things out periodically. I have had some water intrusion that I have had to address, but for being 23 years old and spending every day of it's life sitting outdoors, it's in fair shape. Additionally, as I stated, When, if ever, I get to my build, I will not be slapping it together as we did at Santa Fe. The cabinet maker in me will not allow it48Rob wrote:I would think that a well built, aluminum clad trailer is, at the very least, a 20 year product without any additional sealing or application of various goops.when I first started looking at finding/building a teardrop I stared looking at what fails and in order it is wood and steel. Current trailers/RV's are for the most part no better built than the Santa Fe, and they fail.
Please don't take this wrong as I mean no disrespect, but your comment above is the way most people feel, and why so many trailers go bad.a 20 year product without any additional sealing or application of various goops
While Aluminum siding will last a long, long time, the number one reason trailers leak is from lack of annual inspections/maintenance.![]()
99% of all leaks start out very small, and get larger, and worse over time.
Usually by the time you notice damage inside, there is major damage in the wall/ceiling framing.
As you discovered Carl, you can slap something together with the cheapest materials and questionable construction methods and it will hold, but give water the slightest chance and the trailer, no matter the recycled back yard build, or a hundred thousand dollar factory built will crumble.
Rob
Robbie wrote:What kind of sealant did you use there? I was planning on doing my aluminum install pretty much the same way you did yours will sealant at all the perimeter edges and then overlapping the aluminum where the sheets will meet on the top. I was also thinking of applying the sides first and then putting on the roof skin and bending the edges of the roof skin over the top edge of the sides about a 1/4". But seeing as I have the front and rear bends in my profile I'm debating whether that would be worth the trouble.
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