Do you have a picture of that setup? I’ve been thinking of making a similar “splitter” airdam and looking for the right material. How did you attach that stuff to the camper? And did the cove material damage the paint on the truck roof?
All ⬆️ good questions.
Several moves ago I somehow lost the box of our old photo albums. So unfortunately I don’t have a picture of this setup. It was long ago…
This set up was first done on our 1986 F150 4x4 regular cab long bed truck. That camper was a 1/2 cabover.
I simply glued the top edge of the flexible rubber cover moulding along the bottom front edge of the camper’s cabover. And then used liquid nails to run a very thick bead up behind and under the top of that moulding where it came in contact with the cabover.
But before doing that, I applied several coats of wax to the top of the truck where the moulding would rub on it, to try to protect the paint. To ‘brace’ the moulding where it hit the truck’s roof, I laid down a thick ridge of removable clear caulk on the roof right behind where the moulding laid on it.
Since the truck roof was curved and the bottom of the camper roof was flat, I did have to trim the center of the moulding a little to keep a good tight fit.
On our next truck, a 1989 reg cab k2500 long bed, we had a full cabover camper. On that one, the moulding was attached to the camper using @ a 4’ long a 2x2 screwed and glued into the bottom of the overhead bunk. This was done about a foot in from the front of the cab so it lined up with the top edge of the front of the truck cab’s roof.
This time I attached the moulding to the truck with a similar thick line of ‘removable’ caulk but put two layers of duct tape under it to protect the truck roof paint. The duct tape was red and kind of matched the paint color of the truck.
I hope these descriptions help…