The vinyl moulding that covers the screws should be at most rv shops. I thought mine needed to be replaced, but it went back in pretty easily after cleaning. Heat is your friend. I installed directly from a bucket of hot water and it pushed in like butter. it even stretched further than the original install and overlapped almost a foot.
The gasket that goes under the rail to seal the lid when down, was $2 a foot and I passed, but the stuff you need should be about a 1/4 of that, maybe $15 for a 50' roll?
Reinstall of the canvas at the upper side is pretty back breaking. Lower the camper damn near to the ground, then prop the roof up only half way. you'll still need a small ladder and lots of patience. I'd get square or torx drive screws, as they don't strip as easily as philips heads.
I think you will need to unbolt the bars, or maybe consider cutting the canvas at each of those spots, depending on how hard the bolts are to get at. i never saw how they went on originally, but I could see them not being worth unbolting to avoid a small cut to the PVC tent walls.
I've spent the last 3 weekends slope-side in my 100S. that furnace is loud, but it keeps it warmer than needed, even in single digit negative temps.
Dave
The gasket that goes under the rail to seal the lid when down, was $2 a foot and I passed, but the stuff you need should be about a 1/4 of that, maybe $15 for a 50' roll?
Reinstall of the canvas at the upper side is pretty back breaking. Lower the camper damn near to the ground, then prop the roof up only half way. you'll still need a small ladder and lots of patience. I'd get square or torx drive screws, as they don't strip as easily as philips heads.
I think you will need to unbolt the bars, or maybe consider cutting the canvas at each of those spots, depending on how hard the bolts are to get at. i never saw how they went on originally, but I could see them not being worth unbolting to avoid a small cut to the PVC tent walls.
I've spent the last 3 weekends slope-side in my 100S. that furnace is loud, but it keeps it warmer than needed, even in single digit negative temps.
Dave