The Last Roof You’ll Ever Buy: Rhino Linings Eco-Coat

Every year we climb up on our roofs with 10 or 12 tubes of outrageously expensive RV roof calking. We spend hours covering every little crack, seam, or hole we can find. And we’ll never get them all. Sorry, not gonna happen. That water is still getting in. The calk turns hard and brittle quicker than we all expect causing cracks at the first driveway crossed, making all those hours spent fixing said roof, worthless. With new rubber, fiberglass and even steel roofs this is an unavoidable nuisance. These new roofs will get us a couple years off but will eventually force us back up the ladder for maintenance and repairs. There is a better way. the Last Roof Youll Ever Buy Rhino Linings Eco Coat rhino Linings Eco Coat   |   Rhino Eco-Coat can also be painted to match your rig. New from Rhino Linings (famous for its spray-on bed liners) is the Rhino Eco-Coat material. It’s a spray-on application that’s designed to be extremely waterproof, flexible yet durable, and has been impregnated with aluminum particles to increase its insulation R value. When we were told about this new technology at SEMA last year we had to check it out. It’s another one of those ideas that just makes perfect sense. Spray-on bed-liner material is tough stuff. With a couple tweaks of the formula, Rhino Linings created (in our minds) the future of RV roofing. Plus, it costs about the same as conventional rubber roofs. So we headed south and spent the day at San Diego RV Center in Southern California, where they were giving a Lance Camper its new and final roof.
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