Where are you working? Looks like a gated place or something. What did you do for water, elec, etc? And I have to think it must have rained a time or two during all this. Did you use tarps, etc to deal with that? I’m a thousand questions… about to take on some of this for the first time. Many thanks for your content. By now, I hope you guys are out there making peoples bodies work better, too!
They probably don’t have water/electricity hook ups for this rv where they are. the RV has batteries if they have to electric but since they’re in the wall near electrical wires, you want the electric off. And I bet the used tarps to cover the open areas of the rv when it rained
@@RyanMegan if it works it works lol I'm a disabled veteran so I'm currently having to do things a little slower then i used to so I'm still working on it lol
Did you have it on the outside? Or did it take are of it when you did the inside? And I seen some on ceiling in bedroom, where it stained, did you do anything with that?
There wasn't any water damage on the outside, so we didn't have to mess with those walls. As for the ceiling, we just made sure our leak was sealed so that there was no more active damage and left the roof alone otherwise
My fiancé and I just bought a 1995 Bounder and we found water damage on the exact same side and areas! We are wondering if that’s a common thing for bouncers to have a lot of water damage? Also how much time and money did that cost you to repair? We are thinking our entire left side has water damage from front to back
First, we're excited for you two and your journey renovating your motorhome! Sorry to hear about the water damage. We're not sure if its a common issue for bounders or just older RVs in general. We do not have the exact price on how much our repair was. It's hard to tell what all you'll have to replace until you rip into it! Good luck on your reno and thanks for your support!
Awesome video guys! Thanks for recording everything! That helps. I was wondering once you got to the wall and ripped down the wall paper, did wood come off along with it? How did you get the wood off that lays on top of the styrofoam? Thanks!
Thanks for watching and supporting us! We had the same issue! When we tore the paneling off the wall, bits of wood would stay glued onto the styrofoam. We simply did the best we could to peel off and remove the pieces of wood. It was a long and tedious process. I wish I had a better technique for you!
I had to mute this video the entire time, LOL! No more masks?? I've heard some spray adhesive can basically melt that foam board on RVs, so be careful. cheers!