davidc-HILO
Senior Member
Many of our HiLo's have metal roofs with a rubber roof, with many seams, put on over that at some point as a repair to the leaky, pin hole infested metal roof.
I've also seen either liquid epdm or some other "fix" applied over that. I own 2 with this same thing done to both. Bought them that way, I didn't do it. The one with the "hard" coating over the rubber roof failed HORRIBLY... it failed so bad, it split the seams of the rubber roof under it.
DO NOT DO THIS TYPE OF REPAIR!!! You will not save any money in the long run.
Both of mine failed in a hail storm. The hail hit the roof so hard it caused the original tin roof to poke up through both layers... you want to talk about leaks...
You can think "fluke" if you want - out of 75+ rv's in the park that day, mine were the only ones to suffer roof damage (staying in one, the other was in storage) varied levels of years... even the 70's model class c didn't get damaged.
Don't do it, spend the money and fix the roof like I have to... not on one but two bad idea for a "repair" method
I've also seen either liquid epdm or some other "fix" applied over that. I own 2 with this same thing done to both. Bought them that way, I didn't do it. The one with the "hard" coating over the rubber roof failed HORRIBLY... it failed so bad, it split the seams of the rubber roof under it.
DO NOT DO THIS TYPE OF REPAIR!!! You will not save any money in the long run.
Both of mine failed in a hail storm. The hail hit the roof so hard it caused the original tin roof to poke up through both layers... you want to talk about leaks...
You can think "fluke" if you want - out of 75+ rv's in the park that day, mine were the only ones to suffer roof damage (staying in one, the other was in storage) varied levels of years... even the 70's model class c didn't get damaged.
Don't do it, spend the money and fix the roof like I have to... not on one but two bad idea for a "repair" method