Hi folks, I've been lurking on the list for several months now, enjoying the free exchange of information and gleaning much to help in restoration of my own 1968 Caravel. I now find myself dealing with a problem I've not yet seen discussed. In just the last couple of days I started seeing evidence of dripping from the front underbelly of the trailer, curb side. At first there was just one spot on the driveway and I thought the dog had "marked" the trailer. Beyond being annoyed at the dog for defiling the Airstream, I didn't think much about it, even when I saw the spot again the next day. Yesterday, however, I saw three spots under the trailer when I got home from work and I knew then I had a leak in the fresh water tank. When I first got the trailer a couple years back, I found there was a small, pencil lead-sized hole on the tank bottom a couple inches in from the outlet. I repaired the hole (in a fashion), and replaced the rotted flooring which had resulted from the leak. Not wanting to go through the floor repair hassle again, I immediately drained the tank, took out the front dinette cabinetry, and pulled out the tank. What I found blew my socks off! There under the tank was the unmistakeable droppings of some sort of wood boring insect, presumably termites, as well as evidence of some boring damage to the flooring under the tank. The previously repaired flooring at that! But wait, it gets even worse. The reason the tank was leaking is because the boring insect(s) had apparently chewed their way up into the tank, leaving a pencil lead-sized hole such as I had seen when I first repaired the tank. The position of holes in the tank matches points of damage in the floor consistent with termite or other wood-boring insect activity. Why they would chew into the plastic tank is beyond me, except that the presence of water may have been an irrestible attraction. I am a botanist, and museum curator, so I am all too familier with the potential damage caused by insect pests which attack natural history collections, wood carvings, and the like. But the floor of my Airstream was the last place I would have expected such problems. Therefore, here are my questions to the group. 1. Has anyone else had, or heard of termites or other wood boring insects creating problems in Airstream trailers? 2. If so, how was the problem dealt with? I'm not too worried about repairing the tank since the holes are small, and I've already been-there-done-that. Furthermore I was thinking of laying down a thin sheet of metal below the tank to prevent future penetration, though ideally it won't be an issue because all the little buggers have been exterminated once and for all. Any help will be most appreciated. Steve Boyd 68 Caravel To unsubscribe or to change to a daily Digest, please go to http://www.airstream.net/vaclist/listoffice.html If replying back to this message, please delete all the unnecessary original text from your reply.
