RV Roof Penetration Audit Guide for Older Fifth Wheels

Introduction

Water intrusion is the leading cause of structural deterioration in older fifth wheels. Most leaks begin at roof penetrations — not in the membrane itself.

Every vent, antenna, skylight, and accessory creates a potential failure point.

This guide walks through a structured roof penetration audit designed for long-term durability.

This article is part of the Low Maintenance RV Housing Framework, which focuses on converting older RVs into durable, affordable long-term housing through structural upgrades and failure prevention.


Step 1: Identify Every Penetration

Walk the roof and list:

  • Plumbing vents
  • Refrigerator vent
  • Furnace vent
  • AC units
  • Skylights
  • TV antennas
  • Satellite mounts
  • Solar gland entries
  • Ladder mounts
  • Marker light wiring penetrations

Map them physically. Photograph them.


Step 2: Inspect Sealant Integrity

Look for:

  • Cracked lap sealant
  • Separation at corners
  • Excessive layering from past repairs
  • Shrinking sealant
  • Loose fasteners

Layered sealant often hides prior leak attempts.


Step 3: Check for Soft Spots

Gently press around each penetration.

Soft decking indicates:

  • Water infiltration
  • Delamination
  • Potential rot

Softness near skylights and AC openings is common.


Step 4: Evaluate Unused Components

Remove:

  • Old satellite mounts
  • Unused antenna bases
  • Abandoned wiring entries

Every unused penetration is unnecessary risk.

Seal permanently using proper backing and membrane-compatible sealant.


Step 5: Reduce Future Risk

Where possible:

  • Combine wiring entries
  • Avoid new penetrations
  • Use low-profile components

Roof simplification reduces long-term maintenance.


Conclusion

Roof durability is about elimination, not decoration.

The fewer penetrations, the fewer future leaks.