These turned out to be some real oddball windows- many of these jalouise windows are made by Hehr, but these are not. Add that to the problem that Vintage Trailer Supply was short on supplies, and it took some experimenting for the seals. Thankfully, the incredibly hard plastic seals were still identifiable, and that Vintage Tailer Gaskets DID have the supplies, and after a couple of months of working on them, we got them all done.
I would post a bunch of rebuild pictures, but between all of the scrubbing and polishing of the aluminum, our fingers were so sore that we didn't take any pictures.
Since I was already a glutton for punishment, I then decided to strip the roof and repaint. The PO put on a rubbierized roof paint, but when I was doing some early roof repair, I noticed that it was pretty easy to peel off. What a mess. Scrape, scrape, scrape, and scrape some more. But it was well worth it.
This also happened while I was adding a roof vent (which wasn't there before) that you see in the background, and a bathroom sky light hole, which you see in the foreground. The paint is Rustoleum Tractor paint, and it went on really well. Some of you may remember a few questions about that paint a couple of months ago.
Progress seemed strong- but there was still a lot to do. Plumbing was freaking me out- leaks suck. Electrical needed to be finished, the bath needed to be installed, and all of the tanks needed installed.
The bath pan that was posted a little while ago had a 5 gal black tank installed. Hope that's big enough..... We will see. We have a 14 gallon gray tank that fit perfectly between the frame rails and didn't stick down much. Clarence is a big deal since this is a low profile trailer that had almost no ground clearance.
The black tank has a pressure treated wood structure holding it up over the frame, the gray tank has a fabricated frame around it to support it. BTW, plastic melts. Bet you didn't realize that. I clearly didn't. As we are doing water testing now, I found out that I was spraying the tank with burning metal, and I have found a few pinholes. Yuk. Thankfully, just the gray tank. And just a few holes.
I thought I had space to screw in some fittings into the tank, but the tank literally was perfect in the frame. So I had to switch to compressing slip fit seals. Other than the effort getting the tubes in, they are pretty great.