The original damage caused by the leaking refrigerator panel |
Chipping away more and more |
Ripping out the tile in the hallway, this is NOT fun |
New plywood installed |
Tile dry fitted |
And tile all installed and awaiting grout |
Our coach has 4 slide outs, one on each side of the living area, and one on each side of the bedroom. The slide in question affecting the tile is the one on the passenger side front that encompasses the galley, associated cabinets, and the couch. The slide moves in and out over rollers, 5 in all. 3 are mounted in the floor of the coach from the front of the slide to about the 3/4 mark going aft, the other 2 are mounted in the bottom of the cabinets, one at the rear of the slide about where the double doors are in the above photo and the other in the front of the photo where the single door is. Now when the slide comes in, those two rollers mounted in the base of the cabinets roll over the tile. We knew this when we installed the tile and our installer worked hard to be sure to have an even solid covering of mastic behind those tiles in particular. Well, the challenge to accomplishing that is the ends of the tile had to be pushed and squeezed under the cabinets, but we all thought he had accomplished the task satisfactorily. We had the wood installed later after our return from Alaska in 2014. That went very well, and the slide functioned beautifully.
Wood being installed |
All done |
If you remember we had an appointment with Elite, our go to shop in Oregon back in August of this year to have some work done. They are experts with slides, systems, and remodeling, so we figured we'd ask about our problem while there. Well, Murphy raised his head the very morning of our appointment. We were at a campground not too far away, so we decided Jan would take the truck over a couple minutes before I would bring the motorhome just to make sure they were ready for us. So as she left I started to put the slides in, it is just coincidental that that slide is the last one we bring in, so with all the other slides in, I start to bring the passenger front slide in and......BAM! A loud sharp crack that stops me cold, OMG, what in the world??????? I stop and go look and find the porcelain tile that the rear slide roller moves across has snapped in two. Porcelain tiles are very, very hard and tough, it's why we picked them so when they break it's like a gunshot. I figure well it's already broken and I got to go, so gritting my teeth I bring the slide in the rest of the way and head for Elite.
We get Erik at Elite to take a look and he informs us that whoever installed the tile used the wrong mastic, and in his opinion, there were going to be more and more tiles come loose over time. Oh wow, we don't want to do this job again:( So we decided to cover the broken tile with plastic and packing tape to protect us, the pieces and shards from this tile are like razor blades, and figure we will nurse it back to Florida where we can deal with this one way or another. Well about a week or so ago, the tile shattered completely, and it was really interfering with the movement of the slide so we knew we couldn't ignore it any longer.
Closeup of our busted tile |
The adjustable roller |
The roller's home and the edge of the tile |
You can see here the abysmal coverage of mastic |
And here the fact that there was no adhesion to the plywood, it looks brand new! |
Our temp solution |
5 comments:
No wonder we haven't heard from you!
Similar to concrete, tile is only as strong as the under laying structure or base. It has very low coefficient of flexural strength. The plywood and OSB have huge flex (Wood, God's carbon fiber) and then you have to look at what supports the plywood OSB. I know, "everybody has tile in their rig," but few people use there coach to the level you two do. We put tile in the bathroom of the guest quarters of the M/V Richard Reiss and couldn't keep the darn things in place mounted on a steel deck. I heavy seas the forward superstructure would flex enough to pop out the tiles, usually not in one piece.
All correct. Under the OSB and plywood there is steel tubing. Does it flex, yes and the mastic or thin set we used was supposed to absorb some of that, unfortunately it didn't stick at all to the plywood:( And unfortunately the tile in question wasn't supported by mastic at its extreme edge where the weight of the slide sat on it with the slide extended, so finally it just snapped. Kind of like breaking a stick over your knee, again the installer's mistake. It is interesting though, that looking at the vast majority of new high line coaches available, they all seem to have tile, makes you wonder.
Glad you got things to move comfortably...the joys of living on wheels...:)
Oh yeah, the joys:) But it'll give us another thing to do in Florida LOL.
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