Roof vent leak - Printable Version +- Wanderlodge Gurus - The Member Funded Wanderlodge Forum (http://www.wanderlodgegurus.com) +-- Forum: Yahoo Groups Archive (/forumdisplay.php?fid=61) +--- Forum: WanderlodgeForum (/forumdisplay.php?fid=63) +--- Thread: Roof vent leak (/showthread.php?tid=4561) Pages: 1 2 |
Roof vent leak - James Harvie - 03-25-2007 06:58 I was on top of my bus, last week, cleaning out the storage pods, and I noticed 3 things. I had a small crack in one of the vents, the diamond plate was loose, and 2 of the brackets that hold those 3 bullhorns on, were broken. Yesterday I went back up, tightened up the screws on the plate. I'm not sure if they have nuts on the other end, but I thought I was going to have to drill oversize and install oversize screws. They were all loose, some I got 8 or 9 turns out of the screwdriver, but they all tightened up nice and tight. For the crack in the vent, I cleaned it down with Enamel Reducer, and used that 2 part liquid epoxy. You can get it in any auto parts store, and I'm not sure but maybe Wally World has it too. Just look for the 2 plastic syringes tied together. One part is blue, one clear. When you mix the two, it turns milky white, then about 20 seconds later, it turns clear. I applied it with a small Artists brush. I think this is a good way to go. It is thick enough, so if you have gaps, you can bridge them and I think would add strenght.Just remember it dires in about a minute, so don't mix more than you can use in that time. Not sure if it's paintable, or not I threw the package out a long time ago. I plan on adding a Fantastic fan in that hole a little later, but for now I have 2 lists. One's a" want" list, and one's a "need" list. I'm doing the need list first, driveline maintanence, new tires etc. I may fabricate new brackets, for those Bullhorns, I don't think those are heavy enough. I may point them down too, to keep the debris out. Jimmy Harvie 82FC 35 SB Boston Ma. --------------------------------- No need to miss a message. Get email on-the-go with Yahoo! Mail for Mobile. Get started. [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] Roof vent leak - mbulriss - 03-25-2007 07:48 Jimmy, It's pretty common to have to get up and tighten down the diamond plate screws. I try to do it once a year. The horn brackets are available from PMMI. There's a link for them in the Parts database or in the Links. When I put the new ones one I let the horn bellows rest on the diamond plate to take the pressure off the brackets. They didn't make any vibration noise. Mike Bulriss 1991 WB40 "Texas Minivan" San Antonio, TX --- In WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com, James Harvie > > I was on top of my bus, last week, cleaning out the storage pods, and I noticed 3 things. I had a small crack in one of the vents, the diamond plate was loose, and 2 of the brackets that hold those 3 bullhorns on, were broken. Yesterday I went back up, tightened up the screws on the plate. I'm not sure if they have nuts on the other end, but I thought I was going to have to drill oversize and install oversize screws. They were all loose, some I got 8 or 9 turns out of the screwdriver, but they all tightened up nice and tight. For the crack in the vent, I cleaned it down with Enamel Reducer, and used that 2 part liquid epoxy. You can get it in any auto parts store, and I'm not sure but maybe Wally World has it too. Just look for the 2 plastic syringes tied together. One part is blue, one clear. When you mix the two, it turns milky white, then about 20 seconds later, it turns clear. I applied it with a small Artists brush. I think this is a good way to go. It is thick > enough, so if you have gaps, you can bridge them and I think would add strenght.Just remember it dires in about a minute, so don't mix more than you can use in that time. Not sure if it's paintable, or not I threw the package out a long time ago. I plan on adding a Fantastic fan in that hole a little later, but for now I have 2 lists. One's a" want" list, and one's a "need" list. I'm doing the need list first, driveline maintanence, new tires etc. I may fabricate new brackets, for those Bullhorns, I don't think those are heavy enough. I may point them down too, to keep the debris out. > Jimmy Harvie > 82FC 35 SB > Boston Ma. > > > --------------------------------- > No need to miss a message. Get email on-the-go > with Yahoo! Mail for Mobile. Get started. > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] > Roof vent leak - Leroy Eckert - 03-25-2007 08:42 I do not know for certain about the plate screws because I have not had the problem. If I took a guess, it would be that the screws screw into Rivnuts. As for the blue and white epoxy, it works great until UV tears it up. It is paintable. Depending upon the material, there is a product out there called Plastic Weld available at O'Reillys that works well if applied properly. I have used it on plastic interior parts on the airplane with excellent results. It is paintable. Another deal is to use JB Quick on fiberglass cracks if properly prepared, the cracks stop. Just some info from a person who is off the chart on these things and has good results. Note: Properly prepared is the operative word. You can hurry the painter, but you cannot hurry the paint. Leroy Eckert 1990 WB-40"Smoke N Mirrors" Niceville, FL ----- Original Message ----- From: James Harvie To: WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com Sent: Sunday, March 25, 2007 12:58 PM Subject: [WanderlodgeForum] Roof vent leak I was on top of my bus, last week, cleaning out the storage pods, and I noticed 3 things. I had a small crack in one of the vents, the diamond plate was loose, and 2 of the brackets that hold those 3 bullhorns on, were broken. Yesterday I went back up, tightened up the screws on the plate. I'm not sure if they have nuts on the other end, but I thought I was going to have to drill oversize and install oversize screws. They were all loose, some I got 8 or 9 turns out of the screwdriver, but they all tightened up nice and tight. For the crack in the vent, I cleaned it down with Enamel Reducer, and used that 2 part liquid epoxy. You can get it in any auto parts store, and I'm not sure but maybe Wally World has it too. Just look for the 2 plastic syringes tied together. One part is blue, one clear. When you mix the two, it turns milky white, then about 20 seconds later, it turns clear. I applied it with a small Artists brush. I think this is a good way to go. It is thick enough, so if you have gaps, you can bridge them and I think would add strenght.Just remember it dires in about a minute, so don't mix more than you can use in that time. Not sure if it's paintable, or not I threw the package out a long time ago. I plan on adding a Fantastic fan in that hole a little later, but for now I have 2 lists. One's a" want" list, and one's a "need" list. I'm doing the need list first, driveline maintanence, new tires etc. I may fabricate new brackets, for those Bullhorns, I don't think those are heavy enough. I may point them down too, to keep the debris out. Jimmy Harvie 82FC 35 SB Boston Ma. --------------------------------- No need to miss a message. Get email on-the-go with Yahoo! Mail for Mobile. Get started. [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] Roof vent leak - James Harvie - 03-25-2007 09:56 Mike, thanks. Mine screws were backed out on the outboard side, more than the inside, It makes sense, more pressure there, because of the bow. Can you tell me if those are machine screws, or sheet metal screws?. If they're Machine screws, with nuts, next time, I'll try locktite. If that dosen't work, I'll replace the outboards with studs, and nuts. And thanks for the tips on the brackets. I haven't been in the parts base yet. Jimmy Harvie 82FC 35 SB Boston Ma. mbulriss <mbulriss@...> wrote: Jimmy, It's pretty common to have to get up and tighten down the diamond plate screws. I try to do it once a year. The horn brackets are available from PMMI. There's a link for them in the Parts database or in the Links. When I put the new ones one I let the horn bellows rest on the diamond plate to take the pressure off the brackets. They didn't make any vibration noise. Mike Bulriss 1991 WB40 "Texas Minivan" San Antonio, TX --- In WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com, James Harvie > > I was on top of my bus, last week, cleaning out the storage pods, and I noticed 3 things. I had a small crack in one of the vents, the diamond plate was loose, and 2 of the brackets that hold those 3 bullhorns on, were broken. Yesterday I went back up, tightened up the screws on the plate. I'm not sure if they have nuts on the other end, but I thought I was going to have to drill oversize and install oversize screws. They were all loose, some I got 8 or 9 turns out of the screwdriver, but they all tightened up nice and tight. For the crack in the vent, I cleaned it down with Enamel Reducer, and used that 2 part liquid epoxy. You can get it in any auto parts store, and I'm not sure but maybe Wally World has it too. Just look for the 2 plastic syringes tied together. One part is blue, one clear. When you mix the two, it turns milky white, then about 20 seconds later, it turns clear. I applied it with a small Artists brush. I think this is a good way to go. It is thick > enough, so if you have gaps, you can bridge them and I think would add strenght.Just remember it dires in about a minute, so don't mix more than you can use in that time. Not sure if it's paintable, or not I threw the package out a long time ago. I plan on adding a Fantastic fan in that hole a little later, but for now I have 2 lists. One's a" want" list, and one's a "need" list. I'm doing the need list first, driveline maintanence, new tires etc. I may fabricate new brackets, for those Bullhorns, I don't think those are heavy enough. I may point them down too, to keep the debris out. > Jimmy Harvie > 82FC 35 SB > Boston Ma. > > > --------------------------------- > No need to miss a message. Get email on-the-go > with Yahoo! Mail for Mobile. Get started. > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] > --------------------------------- Get your own web address. Have a HUGE year through Yahoo! Small Business. [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] Roof vent leak - Leroy Eckert - 03-25-2007 10:06 Everthing is great. No complaints. The bus is just fine. Talladega in 3 weeks. Don't need a surge protector there. Oops, on second thought I may need one. LOL The next time your 172 cracks at the nose cowling, use JB Weld and paint. You will not believe the results. Leroy Eckert 1990 WB-40"Smoke N Mirrors" Niceville. FL Single and Multiengine Land Instrument rated Private Pilot, old aerobatic Swift driver. ----- Original Message ----- From: James Harvie To: WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com Sent: Sunday, March 25, 2007 5:36 PM Subject: Re: [WanderlodgeForum] Roof vent leak Leroy. Although JB weld has been around for about 40 years or so. I have never been a beliver, of quick fixes. That is untill the oil pan in my plow truck started leaking.lol I was looking at jacking up the engine, to remove the pan, but instead, I sanded it down to shiney metal, cleaned it with carb clean and threw a coat of that on. Now I swear by it, for certain applications. It dosen't work too good for anything that needs structural support, but I'll bet it would work real well as a liner on a battery box. I'll bet that roof has Rivnuts too, I'll pull one out and look. Mabaglass works good on those airplane door panels too. It's fiberglass combined with bondo.Oh and btw, how did you make out on your fuel gauge problem ? Jimmy Harvie Leroy Eckert certain about the plate screws because I have not had the problem. If I took a guess, it would be that the screws screw into Rivnuts. As for the blue and white epoxy, it works great until UV tears it up. It is paintable. Depending upon the material, there is a product out there called Plastic Weld available at O'Reillys that works well if applied properly. I have used it on plastic interior parts on the airplane with excellent results. It is paintable. Another deal is to use JB Quick on fiberglass cracks if properly prepared, the cracks stop. Just some info from a person who is off the chart on these things and has good results. Note: Properly prepared is the operative word. You can hurry the painter, but you cannot hurry the paint. Leroy Eckert 1990 WB-40"Smoke N Mirrors" Niceville, FL ----- Original Message ----- From: James Harvie To: WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com Sent: Sunday, March 25, 2007 12:58 PM Subject: [WanderlodgeForum] Roof vent leak I was on top of my bus, last week, cleaning out the storage pods, and I noticed 3 things. I had a small crack in one of the vents, the diamond plate was loose, and 2 of the brackets that hold those 3 bullhorns on, were broken. Yesterday I went back up, tightened up the screws on the plate. I'm not sure if they have nuts on the other end, but I thought I was going to have to drill oversize and install oversize screws. They were all loose, some I got 8 or 9 turns out of the screwdriver, but they all tightened up nice and tight. For the crack in the vent, I cleaned it down with Enamel Reducer, and used that 2 part liquid epoxy. You can get it in any auto parts store, and I'm not sure but maybe Wally World has it too. Just look for the 2 plastic syringes tied together. One part is blue, one clear. When you mix the two, it turns milky white, then about 20 seconds later, it turns clear. I applied it with a small Artists brush. I think this is a good way to go. It is thick enough, so if you have gaps, you can bridge them and I think would add strenght.Just remember it dires in about a minute, so don't mix more than you can use in that time. Not sure if it's paintable, or not I threw the package out a long time ago. I plan on adding a Fantastic fan in that hole a little later, but for now I have 2 lists. One's a" want" list, and one's a "need" list. I'm doing the need list first, driveline maintanence, new tires etc. I may fabricate new brackets, for those Bullhorns, I don't think those are heavy enough. I may point them down too, to keep the debris out. Jimmy Harvie 82FC 35 SB Boston Ma. --------------------------------- No need to miss a message. Get email on-the-go with Yahoo! Mail for Mobile. Get started. [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] --------------------------------- Never miss an email again! Yahoo! Toolbar alerts you the instant new Mail arrives. Check it out. [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] Roof vent leak - James Harvie - 03-25-2007 11:36 Leroy. Although JB weld has been around for about 40 years or so. I have never been a beliver, of quick fixes. That is untill the oil pan in my plow truck started leaking.lol I was looking at jacking up the engine, to remove the pan, but instead, I sanded it down to shiney metal, cleaned it with carb clean and threw a coat of that on. Now I swear by it, for certain applications. It dosen't work too good for anything that needs structural support, but I'll bet it would work real well as a liner on a battery box. I'll bet that roof has Rivnuts too, I'll pull one out and look. Mabaglass works good on those airplane door panels too. It's fiberglass combined with bondo.Oh and btw, how did you make out on your fuel gauge problem ? Jimmy Harvie Leroy Eckert do not know for certain about the plate screws because I have not had the problem. If I took a guess, it would be that the screws screw into Rivnuts. As for the blue and white epoxy, it works great until UV tears it up. It is paintable. Depending upon the material, there is a product out there called Plastic Weld available at O'Reillys that works well if applied properly. I have used it on plastic interior parts on the airplane with excellent results. It is paintable. Another deal is to use JB Quick on fiberglass cracks if properly prepared, the cracks stop. Just some info from a person who is off the chart on these things and has good results. Note: Properly prepared is the operative word. You can hurry the painter, but you cannot hurry the paint. Leroy Eckert 1990 WB-40"Smoke N Mirrors" Niceville, FL ----- Original Message ----- From: James Harvie To: WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com Sent: Sunday, March 25, 2007 12:58 PM Subject: [WanderlodgeForum] Roof vent leak I was on top of my bus, last week, cleaning out the storage pods, and I noticed 3 things. I had a small crack in one of the vents, the diamond plate was loose, and 2 of the brackets that hold those 3 bullhorns on, were broken. Yesterday I went back up, tightened up the screws on the plate. I'm not sure if they have nuts on the other end, but I thought I was going to have to drill oversize and install oversize screws. They were all loose, some I got 8 or 9 turns out of the screwdriver, but they all tightened up nice and tight. For the crack in the vent, I cleaned it down with Enamel Reducer, and used that 2 part liquid epoxy. You can get it in any auto parts store, and I'm not sure but maybe Wally World has it too. Just look for the 2 plastic syringes tied together. One part is blue, one clear. When you mix the two, it turns milky white, then about 20 seconds later, it turns clear. I applied it with a small Artists brush. I think this is a good way to go. It is thick enough, so if you have gaps, you can bridge them and I think would add strenght.Just remember it dires in about a minute, so don't mix more than you can use in that time. Not sure if it's paintable, or not I threw the package out a long time ago. I plan on adding a Fantastic fan in that hole a little later, but for now I have 2 lists. One's a" want" list, and one's a "need" list. I'm doing the need list first, driveline maintanence, new tires etc. I may fabricate new brackets, for those Bullhorns, I don't think those are heavy enough. I may point them down too, to keep the debris out. Jimmy Harvie 82FC 35 SB Boston Ma. --------------------------------- No need to miss a message. Get email on-the-go with Yahoo! Mail for Mobile. Get started. [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] --------------------------------- Never miss an email again! Yahoo! Toolbar alerts you the instant new Mail arrives. Check it out. [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] Roof vent leak - Eric Johnson - 03-25-2007 12:22 Jimmy, Bennie at Wanderlodge suggested the fix below to repair roof plate screws that keep loosening up. I've used this fix and it's worked well for me for three years. None of the screws I've replaced this way have loosened up since. 1. Remove stripped screws 2. Fill hole with silicone sealant 3. Replace old screw with a hex head 14 X 1-1/2" HWH T/S 18-8 S/S screw. Bennie told me the replacement screws are larger and have a lower thread pitch than the factory original and tend to hold better. Regards, Eric 84FC35SBWL2 --- In WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com, James Harvie > > I was on top of my bus, last week, cleaning out the storage pods, and I noticed 3 things. I had a small crack in one of the vents, the diamond plate was loose, and 2 of the brackets that hold those 3 bullhorns on, were broken. Yesterday I went back up, tightened up the screws on the plate. I'm not sure if they have nuts on the other end, but I thought I was going to have to drill oversize and install oversize screws. They were all loose, some I got 8 or 9 turns out of the screwdriver, but they all tightened up nice and tight. For the crack in the vent, I cleaned it down with Enamel Reducer, and used that 2 part liquid epoxy. You can get it in any auto parts store, and I'm not sure but maybe Wally World has it too. Just look for the 2 plastic syringes tied together. One part is blue, one clear. When you mix the two, it turns milky white, then about 20 seconds later, it turns clear. I applied it with a small Artists brush. I think this is a good way to go. It is thick > enough, so if you have gaps, you can bridge them and I think would add strenght.Just remember it dires in about a minute, so don't mix more than you can use in that time. Not sure if it's paintable, or not I threw the package out a long time ago. I plan on adding a Fantastic fan in that hole a little later, but for now I have 2 lists. One's a" want" list, and one's a "need" list. I'm doing the need list first, driveline maintanence, new tires etc. I may fabricate new brackets, for those Bullhorns, I don't think those are heavy enough. I may point them down too, to keep the debris out. > Jimmy Harvie > 82FC 35 SB > Boston Ma. > > > --------------------------------- > No need to miss a message. Get email on-the-go > with Yahoo! Mail for Mobile. Get started. > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] > Roof vent leak - James Harvie - 03-26-2007 14:55 What about a PA200R landing "gear up"? Leroy Eckert complaints. The bus is just fine. Talladega in 3 weeks. Don't need a surge protector there. Oops, on second thought I may need one. LOL The next time your 172 cracks at the nose cowling, use JB Weld and paint. You will not believe the results. Leroy Eckert 1990 WB-40"Smoke N Mirrors" Niceville. FL Single and Multiengine Land Instrument rated Private Pilot, old aerobatic Swift driver. ----- Original Message ----- From: James Harvie To: WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com Sent: Sunday, March 25, 2007 5:36 PM Subject: Re: [WanderlodgeForum] Roof vent leak Leroy. Although JB weld has been around for about 40 years or so. I have never been a beliver, of quick fixes. That is untill the oil pan in my plow truck started leaking.lol I was looking at jacking up the engine, to remove the pan, but instead, I sanded it down to shiney metal, cleaned it with carb clean and threw a coat of that on. Now I swear by it, for certain applications. It dosen't work too good for anything that needs structural support, but I'll bet it would work real well as a liner on a battery box. I'll bet that roof has Rivnuts too, I'll pull one out and look. Mabaglass works good on those airplane door panels too. It's fiberglass combined with bondo.Oh and btw, how did you make out on your fuel gauge problem ? Jimmy Harvie Leroy Eckert certain about the plate screws because I have not had the problem. If I took a guess, it would be that the screws screw into Rivnuts. As for the blue and white epoxy, it works great until UV tears it up. It is paintable. Depending upon the material, there is a product out there called Plastic Weld available at O'Reillys that works well if applied properly. I have used it on plastic interior parts on the airplane with excellent results. It is paintable. Another deal is to use JB Quick on fiberglass cracks if properly prepared, the cracks stop. Just some info from a person who is off the chart on these things and has good results. Note: Properly prepared is the operative word. You can hurry the painter, but you cannot hurry the paint. Leroy Eckert 1990 WB-40"Smoke N Mirrors" Niceville, FL ----- Original Message ----- From: James Harvie To: WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com Sent: Sunday, March 25, 2007 12:58 PM Subject: [WanderlodgeForum] Roof vent leak I was on top of my bus, last week, cleaning out the storage pods, and I noticed 3 things. I had a small crack in one of the vents, the diamond plate was loose, and 2 of the brackets that hold those 3 bullhorns on, were broken. Yesterday I went back up, tightened up the screws on the plate. I'm not sure if they have nuts on the other end, but I thought I was going to have to drill oversize and install oversize screws. They were all loose, some I got 8 or 9 turns out of the screwdriver, but they all tightened up nice and tight. For the crack in the vent, I cleaned it down with Enamel Reducer, and used that 2 part liquid epoxy. You can get it in any auto parts store, and I'm not sure but maybe Wally World has it too. Just look for the 2 plastic syringes tied together. One part is blue, one clear. When you mix the two, it turns milky white, then about 20 seconds later, it turns clear. I applied it with a small Artists brush. I think this is a good way to go. It is thick enough, so if you have gaps, you can bridge them and I think would add strenght.Just remember it dires in about a minute, so don't mix more than you can use in that time. Not sure if it's paintable, or not I threw the package out a long time ago. I plan on adding a Fantastic fan in that hole a little later, but for now I have 2 lists. One's a" want" list, and one's a "need" list. I'm doing the need list first, driveline maintanence, new tires etc. I may fabricate new brackets, for those Bullhorns, I don't think those are heavy enough. I may point them down too, to keep the debris out. Jimmy Harvie 82FC 35 SB Boston Ma. --------------------------------- No need to miss a message. Get email on-the-go with Yahoo! Mail for Mobile. Get started. [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] --------------------------------- Never miss an email again! Yahoo! Toolbar alerts you the instant new Mail arrives. Check it out. [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] --------------------------------- Bored stiff? Loosen up... Download and play hundreds of games for free on Yahoo! Games. [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] Roof vent leak - James Harvie - 03-26-2007 14:59 Eric, thanks, that's a big help. Next time these work loose, I'd like to make a permenant repair Jimmy Harvie 82 35 FC Boston Ma. Eric Johnson Jimmy, Bennie at Wanderlodge suggested the fix below to repair roof plate screws that keep loosening up. I've used this fix and it's worked well for me for three years. None of the screws I've replaced this way have loosened up since. 1. Remove stripped screws 2. Fill hole with silicone sealant 3. Replace old screw with a hex head 14 X 1-1/2" HWH T/S 18-8 S/S screw. Bennie told me the replacement screws are larger and have a lower thread pitch than the factory original and tend to hold better. Regards, Eric 84FC35SBWL2 --- In WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com, James Harvie > > I was on top of my bus, last week, cleaning out the storage pods, and I noticed 3 things. I had a small crack in one of the vents, the diamond plate was loose, and 2 of the brackets that hold those 3 bullhorns on, were broken. Yesterday I went back up, tightened up the screws on the plate. I'm not sure if they have nuts on the other end, but I thought I was going to have to drill oversize and install oversize screws. They were all loose, some I got 8 or 9 turns out of the screwdriver, but they all tightened up nice and tight. For the crack in the vent, I cleaned it down with Enamel Reducer, and used that 2 part liquid epoxy. You can get it in any auto parts store, and I'm not sure but maybe Wally World has it too. Just look for the 2 plastic syringes tied together. One part is blue, one clear. When you mix the two, it turns milky white, then about 20 seconds later, it turns clear. I applied it with a small Artists brush. I think this is a good way to go. It is thick > enough, so if you have gaps, you can bridge them and I think would add strenght.Just remember it dires in about a minute, so don't mix more than you can use in that time. Not sure if it's paintable, or not I threw the package out a long time ago. I plan on adding a Fantastic fan in that hole a little later, but for now I have 2 lists. One's a" want" list, and one's a "need" list. I'm doing the need list first, driveline maintanence, new tires etc. I may fabricate new brackets, for those Bullhorns, I don't think those are heavy enough. I may point them down too, to keep the debris out. > Jimmy Harvie > 82FC 35 SB > Boston Ma. > > > --------------------------------- > No need to miss a message. Get email on-the-go > with Yahoo! Mail for Mobile. Get started. > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] > --------------------------------- Expecting? Get great news right away with email Auto-Check. Try the Yahoo! Mail Beta. [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] Roof vent leak - Leroy Eckert - 03-27-2007 00:40 That can't be good, especially on the engine and prop. There are those who have and those who will, all the while asking why that horn was making so much noise. . Leroy Eckert 1990 WB-40"Smoke N Mirrors" Niceville, FL ----- Original Message ----- From: James Harvie To: WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com Sent: Monday, March 26, 2007 8:55 PM Subject: Re: [WanderlodgeForum] Roof vent leak What about a PA200R landing "gear up"? Leroy Eckert The bus is just fine. Talladega in 3 weeks. Don't need a surge protector there. Oops, on second thought I may need one. LOL The next time your 172 cracks at the nose cowling, use JB Weld and paint. You will not believe the results. Leroy Eckert 1990 WB-40"Smoke N Mirrors" Niceville. FL Single and Multiengine Land Instrument rated Private Pilot, old aerobatic Swift driver. ----- Original Message ----- From: James Harvie To: WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com Sent: Sunday, March 25, 2007 5:36 PM Subject: Re: [WanderlodgeForum] Roof vent leak Leroy. Although JB weld has been around for about 40 years or so. I have never been a beliver, of quick fixes. That is untill the oil pan in my plow truck started leaking.lol I was looking at jacking up the engine, to remove the pan, but instead, I sanded it down to shiney metal, cleaned it with carb clean and threw a coat of that on. Now I swear by it, for certain applications. It dosen't work too good for anything that needs structural support, but I'll bet it would work real well as a liner on a battery box. I'll bet that roof has Rivnuts too, I'll pull one out and look. Mabaglass works good on those airplane door panels too. It's fiberglass combined with bondo.Oh and btw, how did you make out on your fuel gauge problem ? Jimmy Harvie Leroy Eckert certain about the plate screws because I have not had the problem. If I took a guess, it would be that the screws screw into Rivnuts. As for the blue and white epoxy, it works great until UV tears it up. It is paintable. Depending upon the material, there is a product out there called Plastic Weld available at O'Reillys that works well if applied properly. I have used it on plastic interior parts on the airplane with excellent results. It is paintable. Another deal is to use JB Quick on fiberglass cracks if properly prepared, the cracks stop. Just some info from a person who is off the chart on these things and has good results. Note: Properly prepared is the operative word. You can hurry the painter, but you cannot hurry the paint. Leroy Eckert 1990 WB-40"Smoke N Mirrors" Niceville, FL ----- Original Message ----- From: James Harvie To: WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com Sent: Sunday, March 25, 2007 12:58 PM Subject: [WanderlodgeForum] Roof vent leak I was on top of my bus, last week, cleaning out the storage pods, and I noticed 3 things. I had a small crack in one of the vents, the diamond plate was loose, and 2 of the brackets that hold those 3 bullhorns on, were broken. Yesterday I went back up, tightened up the screws on the plate. I'm not sure if they have nuts on the other end, but I thought I was going to have to drill oversize and install oversize screws. They were all loose, some I got 8 or 9 turns out of the screwdriver, but they all tightened up nice and tight. For the crack in the vent, I cleaned it down with Enamel Reducer, and used that 2 part liquid epoxy. You can get it in any auto parts store, and I'm not sure but maybe Wally World has it too. Just look for the 2 plastic syringes tied together. One part is blue, one clear. When you mix the two, it turns milky white, then about 20 seconds later, it turns clear. I applied it with a small Artists brush. I think this is a good way to go. It is thick enough, so if you have gaps, you can bridge them and I think would add strenght.Just remember it dires in about a minute, so don't mix more than you can use in that time. Not sure if it's paintable, or not I threw the package out a long time ago. I plan on adding a Fantastic fan in that hole a little later, but for now I have 2 lists. One's a" want" list, and one's a "need" list. I'm doing the need list first, driveline maintanence, new tires etc. I may fabricate new brackets, for those Bullhorns, I don't think those are heavy enough. I may point them down too, to keep the debris out. Jimmy Harvie 82FC 35 SB Boston Ma. --------------------------------- No need to miss a message. Get email on-the-go with Yahoo! Mail for Mobile. Get started. 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