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Sponge area in floor

Saurd

Member
Have a 2022 Avenue 30RLS. There is an area of the floor, high traffic, about 18 - 24 in square that is very sponge. It is just ahead of the island in the center. Started suspecting something mid last summer but while getting it ready this spring decided to inquire on the issue. No evidence of any type of water leaks anywhere roof or plumbing on the rig much less right in the middle, with waste tanks are beneath it.

Prior to going to the dealer would like to understand the basic floor construction of this model. Would anyone have the details, thickness of each layer & material in the floor and possibly a cross section view. Realizing it very well could have a foam core that may be compressing.

Then what is the best repair path? A fast inexpensive way to deal with the issue?
 

RockDr896

Well-known member
Lantley is correct and here is what AI says. I would be curious to here what Alliance can do to correct the problem. Let us know how your concerns were addressed please!

Video Link....go to the 14:30 mark and you can see the flooring

I didn't like the idea, when I first saw this approach to flooring. It ties the owners to the manufacturer and eliminates any DIY opportunity to fix it themselves. If it really bothered me, I would be starting a new thread, as I convert it back to wood...LOL.

A more realistic approach, may be to cut out the area and weld in a solid piece of aluminum. After you cut the piece out, you could close the cut face with metal and then weld in whatever solution you need, to reinforce the area. I would then simply lay a new piece of vinyl flooring on top of the existing. It shouldn't affect the slides and other thresholds. I should have done that, when I replaced mine last month.
 

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RockDr896

Well-known member
This got me thinking. I think the repair would need to tie into the cross bracing they include with their construction of the floor.
 

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Lantley

Prominent Member
Overall laminated flooring is a bad idea simply because it develops soft spots in the high traffic areas.
How soft? or how many softs spot occur is relative to how often the area is walked on and how heavy are the people doing the walking.
My last RV had a laminate floor and I had a couple of soft spots.
I learned to live with them, trying to repair them was more trouble than it was worth. Once I understood what the problem was and that I was not going to just fall thru I accepted the issue.
While I imagine some are better than others, Laminate floors are just a poor idea from the start in my mind.
 

Saurd

Member
Thank you to all who have helped the understanding of the issue. Bottom line the true fix is very $$$$ and no real DIY solution without major work. Has anyone received a response from Alliance regarding this issue? What are the long term affects of just living with the issue, how much will it degrade over time and what would be the ultimate failure point?
 

RockDr896

Well-known member
I would love to here what you are told, concerning a fix, if there is one. Please update this thread, if you get one.

I have been thinking about this today, while pressure washing my driveway..LOL. I think a welder could be avoided, if you use screws, to attach from crossbeam to crossbeam, with whatever aluminum reinforced patch you put in.

Can somebody try using a stud finder and see if it picks up the cross beams in the floor? If that works, then making the cut, would not be scary. I seriously doubt the floor has any real structural strength, to the overall rig. The walls are bolted to the outside frame, like continuous footings on a house. I am guessing, based on some research, you are looking at a 2 1/2" floor. Make sure your patch, attaches to the cross members and I think you would be fine.

So some bar napkin math here....
$328.72 for 25 feet of replacement Linoleum (I have a 370fb, so you would need less, so they sell it by the SqYd)
$188 to NC shipping
$200 Square tubing patch piece to bolt to cross members. Maybe allow a 1/8" hardwood board to screw on a a cap. I over priced this part.
$0.00 Remove island, slide wear bars, stairs, Side tables on back wall...... 1 day labor if you are young and call it 2 days if you are 60 like me. Maybe hire a remote RV repair guy and get a helper, as an alternative.
$0.00 Lay the new linoleum....1 to 2 days...depending on the glue cure time...lay over top of existing, making sure you put cut out piece of linoleum, back onto patch piece. You could put any piece. Could probably get a piece at a flooring store dumpster.
$0.00 Put it all back together if you are DIY (Call it 2 days again)
$100 in misc trim replacement.

So I think you could go DIY if it is within your comfort zone. I would also say, I personally, would not trust this kind of repair to a dealer.
You have 5 days, plus assembly of your aluminum patch piece.

Best of luck, but these are the considerations and ideas, for your review.
 

Lantley

Prominent Member
The problem is often not as simple as adding structural support. The problem often occurs above or near the waste tanks.
The laminate floor is not study enough to span the size of the tank. Walking on the flooring above the tank creates a soft spot above the tank..
It's not possible to add a structural member above the tank. or in the space occupied by the tank
Laminate floors can quickly become a losing battle.
 

RockDr896

Well-known member
The cross members are above the tanks, from what I can see. They probably bolt to the frame. I would even consult with Alliance, before I attempted something like that and see what their reaction would be. I know square tubing would be stronger and superior to their current floor design. Maybe they just wanted to use more of their Azedel "In House" components, rather than buying wood.

It would be a big job and I would have to love the trailer, before I jumped into fixing it. It can be done though.


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Lantley

Prominent Member
The cross members are above the tanks, from what I can see. They probably bolt to the frame. I would even consult with Alliance, before I attempted something like that and see what their reaction would be. I know square tubing would be stronger and superior to their current floor design. Maybe they just wanted to use more of their Azedel "In House" components, rather than buying wood.

It would be a big job and I would have to love the trailer, before I jumped into fixing it. It can be done though.


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No Doubt it can be done. But I decided on my last RV, fixing the problem was more trouble than it's worth vs. living with the soft spots.
I imagine if the soft spots really got to be more extensive serious problem I would take my lumps by trading the unit in for something else vs. attempting to fix it.
 
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