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12-16-2014, 06:50 AM
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#1
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2 Rivet Member
2013 25' International
mont st hilaire
, Quebec
Join Date: Aug 2014
Posts: 83
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Airstream in the snow and ice melt !!!!
HI
I want to use my airstream from Canada to Florida and someone told me this is a bad ideal because the airstream can rust !!!!
In the road they put the icemelt and its can make a reaction with the airstream
someone have a ideal for that ???
is it a fact or legendre ????
thank you
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12-16-2014, 07:10 AM
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#2
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Rivet Master
2020 28' Flying Cloud
Upper St Clair
, Pennsylvania
Join Date: Aug 2011
Posts: 2,943
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Hi Soccoo:
No your AS will not rust, the frame and axles are the only parts subject to rust. BUT, your and every AS is subject to corrosion from the salt used on the roads in winter. Once it, the salt or salt water gets into the rivets you will have a tough time getting it out and will then be fighting it for as long as you own the AS.
What we have done, as we live north as well, is once we hit an area where we pretty much know there will no longer be salt is stop at a self service car wash and take quite a long time to wash and scrub the UNDERSIDE of the AS and then wash the visible exterior using a Micro Fiber hand wash glove so as to not scratch the visible outside. On the underside I use the scrub brushes provided at the car washes as well as the high pressure hoses. We had a 2010 which when we sold her never showed any corrosion using this method.
Enjoy.
__________________
2020 28' Twin Flying Cloud
2021 F350 6.7 King Ranch
USAF Master Training Instructor (TI) & (MTI)- 68-72
Volunteer K9 Rehabilitator & Trainer
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12-16-2014, 07:10 AM
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#3
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Rivet Master
1978 Argosy Minuet 6.0 Metre
Currently Looking...
Wauwatosa
, Wisconsin
Join Date: Oct 2010
Posts: 810
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Road salt and aluminum don't mix. The salt will corrode the aluminum. Aluminum does not rust, it corrodes, which is just as bad.
Many ASrs pull their AS through salty roads to get to a warmer place. When you get there, wash or at least hose down your AS very well to get the salt off.
__________________
Judging a person does not define who they are, it defines who YOU are.
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12-16-2014, 07:42 AM
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#4
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Rivet Master
2000 25' Safari
Davidson County
, NC Highlands County, FL
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 4,493
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Quote:
Originally Posted by socool69
HI
I want to use my airstream from Canada to Florida and someone told me this is a bad ideal because the airstream can rust !!!!
In the road they put the icemelt and its can make a reaction with the airstream
someone have a ideal for that ???
is it a fact or legendre ????
thank you
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If you travel when the roads are dry, there will not be a lot of salt getting onto the trailer. Go south!!!! Enjoy the warm in FL. I have several friends from Canada who are already there. I was in FL, swimming in the outdoor pool, just a few days back. I hope I'll be back in a few weeks!
__________________
Alan
2014 Silverado LTZ 1500 Crew Cab 5.3L maximum trailering package
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12-16-2014, 08:31 AM
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#5
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Rivet Master
2007 23' Safari SE
San Diego
, California
Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 1,495
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12-16-2014, 08:39 AM
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#6
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Figment of My Imagination
2012 Interstate Coach
From All Over
, More Than Anywhere Else
Join Date: Dec 2011
Posts: 10,868
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Quote:
Originally Posted by GeocamperAS
Aluminum does not rust, it corrodes, which is just as bad.
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Rust is corrosion is oxidation. It's all the same process, just different names. Corroded iron or steel is rust, corroded aluminum is aluminum oxide, but it's all corrosion.
Of particular concern with regard to road salt is driving on wet roads as the ice melts. Saltwater is an excellent electrolyte, and aluminum is an excellent anode for steel. Anyplace that you have aluminum in direct contact with steel and both in direct contact with saltwater, you can get galvanic corrosion of the aluminum.
__________________
I thought getting old would take longer!
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12-16-2014, 09:30 AM
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#8
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3 Rivet Member
2015 16' Sport
Oakville
, Ontario
Join Date: Aug 2014
Posts: 234
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There's an Underbody Treatment. Cold weather info is garbage.
Recommended by the dealer here for people who use the trailer in the winter, and apparently there's a subset who do.In fact there's a group who consider this the most enjoyable trailering(with some supplemental heat for the tanks) in their allegedly 3 season trailer. I believe it's the wax-type treatment.
As mentioned here, water and snow aren't your enemy, salt is. Keep the trailer washed and waxed and clean it off after trips.
Your mileage may vary. Honestly, Airstreams' information on this topic seems contradictory and inconsistent to me. The brochure shows the bambi being used as a toasty apres-ski chalet with hot chocolate, some literature says all tanks are insulated, others seems to say only international and cloud tanks are, and maybe only international tanks have ducted heat, some parts of the manual claim there isn't much to worry about so long as you can keep the inside of the trailer above freezing, other parts and posts seem to warn you to winterize at the first cold breeze or the connectors will snap off. Or maybe you'll be fine so long as long as your airstream doesn't get "wind chill" on the highway, so you should keep an eye on the temp then, but you can't because it's not legal to ride in the towed trailer.
Or : "You'll be fine as long as you don't run out of propane, which we give you no way to monitor/hot swap.", or the "furnace will keep the airstream warm enough, unless it doesn't and you'll only be okay if you stay plugged in and run the furnace and the heat strip."
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12-16-2014, 09:36 AM
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#9
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Rivet Master
2020 28' Flying Cloud
Upper St Clair
, Pennsylvania
Join Date: Aug 2011
Posts: 2,943
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Quote:
Originally Posted by SilverGate
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The Magnesium Spray is now used extensively throughout the region we live in. So this year we are not going south. Unfortunate for us, but simply not worth it, plus I am so busy training and rehabilitating dogs at the new rescue we are helping get off the ground, I basically don't want to go. I know I'll eat my words come January - February - March.
__________________
2020 28' Twin Flying Cloud
2021 F350 6.7 King Ranch
USAF Master Training Instructor (TI) & (MTI)- 68-72
Volunteer K9 Rehabilitator & Trainer
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12-16-2014, 10:09 AM
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#10
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Figment of My Imagination
2012 Interstate Coach
From All Over
, More Than Anywhere Else
Join Date: Dec 2011
Posts: 10,868
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Quote:
Originally Posted by timhortons
Or maybe you'll be fine so long as long as your airstream doesn't get "wind chill" on the highway, so you should keep an eye on the temp then, but you can't because it's not legal to ride in the towed trailer.
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I honestly don't know who came up with that one, but it sure is persistent among people who don't really know what windchill means. I blame TV weathermen for that misconception.
Here's a simple illustration of windchill:
Let's say the temperature is 35°F. The temperature is above freezing, right? So nothing in your trailer will freeze. Now, let's add a 60mph wind, equivalent to the slipstream from driving down the highway. The windchill is a below-freezing 17°F. But guess what? Still nothing in your trailer will freeze!
Windchill only affects critters with a metabolism, that is trying to keep warm as the wind sucks away their body heat faster. Your trailer effectively has a metabolism if you are running a furnace. It's trying to keep warm as the wind sucks away the heat faster, with the heat controlled by a thermostat.
Windchill will not make your trailer colder. What it will do is make your trailer cold faster. Windchill will make you use more BTUs to keep it warm, so your furnace will have to run longer to keep the same interior temperature. But the outside of the trailer will never get colder than the actual outside temperature, no matter how much windchill there is.
__________________
I thought getting old would take longer!
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12-16-2014, 02:05 PM
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#11
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2 Rivet Member
1978 28' Ambassador
Pacifica
, California
Join Date: Nov 2013
Posts: 99
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These forums are so educational! Haha I never understood windchill (Cali girl-sorry! haha) but that makes sense with relation to trailer temps. I think I'm still too much of a coward to go snow camping in my trailer in the near future...
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12-16-2014, 03:00 PM
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#12
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3 Rivet Member
2015 16' Sport
Oakville
, Ontario
Join Date: Aug 2014
Posts: 234
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Sorry Protaganist, thought the windchill was self explanatory .... short of some wierd evaporative effect air movement can't make your trailer cooler than the air it's sitting in. That's basic thermodynamics.
However air flow across the surface will certainly cool it faster. Like the reverse of a convection oven. If the outside temp is below freezing, it could decrease the ability of furnace at given BTUs output to maintain the tanks above freezing for a given sub-zero tempurature and model.
Is there any data ? -10C is safe when stationary with the furnace running full tilt, but will freeze you up with a 40MPH-55MPH wind/drive ? I have no idea. If your heat source conks or because you have to drive across a state, or you go get more propane, how much time do you have. Manual basically says Good Luck.
For 100k list on the top of the line trailers there should be a small touchscreen that tells you all of this. tank temp, lbs of propane remaining and burn rate, battery AH and use rate, etc, out and in temp, etc ... but then the 100k trailer shouldn't be shipping with U-Boat battery tech either.
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12-16-2014, 03:10 PM
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#13
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Rivet Master
2007 23' Safari SE
San Diego
, California
Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 1,495
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Quote:
Originally Posted by SilverGate
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I just noticed that if you are not signed in, the above link will not work. But if you are signed in, it will.
For those of you who do not want to sign in and still see Bert's story of his extensive corrosion due to magnesium chloride road salt spray resulting in his replacement of his trailer, one of the below links should work:
Industry Secret! Airstream – and “the Worst Case of Filiform Corrosion Ever†| Bert Gildart: Writer and Photographer
or his posting on September 4, 2011 on his blog:
Travel photography, national park pictures and RV travel.
"Glimpses From Bert & Jane Gildart's Travel Adventures"
(Moderators, can you look into this problem with links. It would be nice if all viewers could use the links, whether they're signed in or not. Thanks!)
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12-16-2014, 04:42 PM
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#14
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Figment of My Imagination
2012 Interstate Coach
From All Over
, More Than Anywhere Else
Join Date: Dec 2011
Posts: 10,868
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Quote:
Originally Posted by timhortons
If the outside temp is below freezing, it could decrease the ability of furnace at given BTUs output to maintain the tanks above freezing for a given sub-zero tempurature and model.
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The real problem comes in when you're losing heat so fast that the furnace can't keep up with the loss even when constantly running. Which of course will deplete your propane and/or house batteries in a hurry as well.
__________________
I thought getting old would take longer!
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12-16-2014, 04:46 PM
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#15
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3 Rivet Member
1978 31' Excella 500
Barrie
, Ontario
Join Date: Dec 2012
Posts: 217
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I pulled my AS to Cordova AL in Dec and came back in Feb, had it power washed at Airstream in London ON so far no sign of corrosion, will be leaving the end of Jan for Louisiana try to run when roads are dry but not always so far so good.
Has any one ever used the Blue Beacon truck washes to clean up on the way ?
To keep my AS weight down I do not carry water in my tanks just carry 5 gal refillable container to use when boon docking .
When I head out this time I'm going to get TV & AS weighed at Cat scale just to have a record of overall weight.
Keep the shiny side up.
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12-17-2014, 08:32 AM
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#16
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2 Rivet Member
2013 25' International
mont st hilaire
, Quebec
Join Date: Aug 2014
Posts: 83
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WOW !!!
THANK YOU SO MUTCH FOR ALL YOUR COMMENTS
Im so nervus now !!
ok I will wash it and wax it when I will be in florida FIRST GOOD IDEAL
ideal from a friend ....
My friend from a car dealer told me they have a product electrostatic rustproofing oto protec !! it s a module to slowing down considerably the corrosion process http://www.otoprotec.com/en!! ?????
it powerfull with a low consumption of 6.9 ma and maintenance free !! but expensive is not a object 300$ .... if the fix the problem or help ...
As someone ever heared about that ?
and the soap I need to use will be .... ???
thank you again
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12-24-2014, 09:36 PM
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#17
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3 Rivet Member
2015 16' Sport
Oakville
, Ontario
Join Date: Aug 2014
Posts: 234
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I heard they don't work.
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12-24-2014, 10:24 PM
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#18
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Figment of My Imagination
2012 Interstate Coach
From All Over
, More Than Anywhere Else
Join Date: Dec 2011
Posts: 10,868
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Quote:
Originally Posted by socool69
My friend from a car dealer told me they have a product electrostatic rustproofing oto protec !! it s a module to slowing down considerably the corrosion process http://www.otoprotec.com/en!! ?????
it powerfull with a low consumption of 6.9 ma and maintenance free !! but expensive is not a object 300$ .... if the fix the problem or help ...
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It's an old principle going back more than thirty years, called "impressed current cathodic protection" It's used on some submersible steel structures in place of sacrificial zinc, aluminum, or magnesium anodes.
But without an electrolyte to submerge it in, an impressed current system is worthless for preventing corrosion. Now if you want to store your Airstream underwater…
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I thought getting old would take longer!
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12-25-2014, 01:02 AM
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#19
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Rivet Master
1999 34' Excella
Currently Looking...
Hillsboro
, Texas
Join Date: Feb 2013
Posts: 6,408
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There are some good protects tx you can "coat " the underside and even sides of your AS with. Think the old stuff for weapons "cosmolene". One is made by Boeing. Available thru AS. BOESHIELD I think. I had some rust and corrosion it halted. Of course, road spray and salts can get Pls SS you might never expect.... But, there is that option for some peace of mind.
Hey, Protagonist, what happens when folks "land" and set Down the stabilizers, plug in to grounded receptacle??? Will that induce any current? Just wondering... Also, I have experienced a static discharge once as I walked up to the AS and touched it... I figured it was someone nearby in a disco suit...???
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Peace and Blessings..
Channing
WBCCI# 30676
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12-25-2014, 04:55 AM
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#20
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Figment of My Imagination
2012 Interstate Coach
From All Over
, More Than Anywhere Else
Join Date: Dec 2011
Posts: 10,868
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Quote:
Originally Posted by cwf
Hey, Protagonist, what happens when folks "land" and set Down the stabilizers, plug in to grounded receptacle??? Will that induce any current? Just wondering...
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No. When you're plugged in, you're grounding to earth through the ground wire in the shore power cable, not through your stabilizers or tongue jack. There is no impressed current to provide cathodic protection. At least you'd better hope not! When it happens by accident, that's how people get electrocuted!
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