
ROCKERDAN
OCD Sledhead
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- '18 RTX 50th "Winder"
nate007 said:Not to be critical, but I have played with about every kind of foam on the market (I own an insulation company)and to avoid the hastles of the mess, the window and door foam is okay, but I would recommend the minimal expanding foam. Generally I would cringe at the thought of "hardware store foam", but the minimal expanding foam is actually a more dense foam, and will resist degrading over time. Once you take the bolts out of the end of the bars, (I would leave the bolts out and just try to put something under it to catch the excess) put some clear silicone over the hole. The exposure will cause the foam to degrade, which will let moisture in and possibly rust the bars from the inside out, or worse, the moisture it will absorb could freeze and split the bars! Keep in mind that the foam seals out air but will absorb some ammount of moistureand in such a confined area will probably never dry out if it does get wet. (washing?) I would definately seal the ends of the bars, and try to fill the entire bar if you can. We do this to the rungs on ladders and it adds a huge ammount of strength to them also!
Nate
Hi Nate..
I did state to use the LOW expansion foam..I used to use the regular foam for yrs on window/door installs,then when low expansion came out i switched...the old stuff would dry hard and brittle...we would saw it off...and the new low expansion stuff stays flexible...
while i agree with much of what you said...I dont see any ILL effect,such as freezing or rusting of bars....I agree you could fill entire bar,but i feel its not needed....
thanks for your input,thats what this site is all about....I truly feel this simple cheap and easy fix will go along way to HELPING keep hands warmer then stock....and any extra heat,no matter how little is good!
Dan