KCStudly wrote:Javanino,
What you are suggesting is very similar to what I have planned, except between the raised inner lip and the rabbeted outer step, I intend to route a dado into the top edge of the wall for the seal to recess down into. The seal trough will run right off to the bottom edge of the floor and the back/lower edge of the hatch will close down and seal against the rear edge of the floor. Any water that gets past the side seal runs down the trough and out the bottom.
See if this works (disregard the dots, just look at the brakcets and underscores). Inside galley is to the left, outside curb side is to the right. Seal goes down in the little trough. I'll try to get an image from my computer model tomorrow.
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Javanino wrote:Then again, not exactly. The first cut alone is what I'm talking about. Cut the corner and place the weatherstrip there and don't do the second cut. It would act to do 2 things. Keep water from running into the galley and give the lid something more rigid to sit on when it's locked down.
Again, I'm just thinking out loud here guys. I'm a newb to all this teardropping but part of the fun is trying different ideas. It's the more experienced guys job to say "Hey, we tried that and it didn't work. Here's why".
KCStudly wrote:Javanino,
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aggie79 wrote:Another issue with the step is what will the high side rest against. Most likely that will be the bottom side of the hatch projection. The bumping and vibration will cause wear on the sidewall step and the hatch.
My sidewalls are approximately 1-1/4" thick. (They're insulated.) I used two parallel runs of Grant's hatch seals on the underside of hatch overhang. There is a gap between the seals. My thought was that if water ever got past the outer seal, it would run down the gap between the two seals. As it turned out, the inner seal isn't needed. My hatch doesn't leak even when I pressure wash my teardrop at the neighborhood coin-operated car wash.
Javanino wrote:Too me the hurricane hinge hangover idea ruins the flow and aesthetics of an otherwise really cool design. If it's cut flush and the sidewalls have a notch cut into, it would remedy this. Maybe
aggie79 wrote:Javanino wrote:Too me the hurricane hinge hangover idea ruins the flow and aesthetics of an otherwise really cool design. If it's cut flush and the sidewalls have a notch cut into, it would remedy this. Maybe
I generally agree, but using the 10-foot rule, you don't notice the overhang.
What looks like the shadow of the hinge overhang in the picture above is actually a rain diverter made out of 3/4" angle aluminum. (My hurricane hatch extends 3/4" out on each side.)
BTW, referring to the prior post, you can see the double seals that I applied on the underside of my hatch.
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