








🛡️ Seal the Deal: Your RV's Best Defense Against Leaks!
WELLUCK RV Roof Sealant Tape is a 6-inch by 50-foot industrial-grade tape designed for effective roof repairs on RVs, trailers, and boats. It creates a waterproof, UV-resistant barrier that remains flexible in extreme temperatures, ensuring long-lasting protection against leaks. The natural white color enhances the aesthetic of your RV while providing easy installation and compatibility with various roofing materials.






R**Y
Great buy!
This works great! I used it to seal up around a window A/C unit. It's too soon to know how long it will last, but so far I am more than pleased. It's very thick and as it warms up the adhesive will squeeze out a little around the edges when pressed, which in my opinion gives a better seal. Take your time, use a razor knife to cut it, make sure your surface is dry and it should do the trick.
M**G
Strong. Sticky. Waterproof. Easy to use. Good tape. I like it.
Great repair tape for my camper trailer roof. I had lots of cracks and this tape made the repair job easy.It was good tape for sealing around the skylights and AC unit. The brush on roof coating went right over and made it look great. It's easy to use. Im confident in a dry roof now. 5 thumbs up. See my pictures. I recommend this tape.
T**A
Excellent product
Worked very well on my rv roof vents and for reinforcing seams
Z**.
Thus far seems to work good
I used it for my residential rubber roof on my Boston-Irish flat roof house. My roof is 30 years old and was not installed properly - the membrane was assembled from 4 pieces but the seams were not taped over. The termination strips only had nails every 24 inches or so and was not sealed neither, the chimney and vents were sealed with asphalt, not a rubber sealant. Now, after 30 years, the membrane shrank and pulled out the nails and thereby termination strips (would not have been able to do so if more nails would have been used - maybe not even if some of the nails wouldn't have failed due to corrosion. Ditto with the tar-seals of chimney and vents - the membrane just pulled out. Water started to penetrate and I got 3 or 4 water spots on my ceiling telling me things were not right anymore.I went up on the roof for the first time since I bought the place (didn't have a ladder tall enough, bought one now) and nailed the termination strips back and put an extra nail in between. I figured I should seal them now - it's a roof, you don't want to neglect it. And now I have some extra holes in it as the membrane shrunk and I was not able to stretch it so I could nail into the existing holes - that's pretty much impossible and I'd think a professional roofer wouldn't have been able to do that neither. I was shocked to learn what seam seal tape cost. The roofing place quoted me $350.- per 50 ft roll. I have plans to build another story on top in 5 years or so. I would have been looking at >= $1400.- for seam sale tape alone. I would have spend it if I wouldn't have had plans - the membrane still looks pretty good even after 30 years full sun exposure. But then I found this and thought maybe this is a good compromise - and I now believe it is indeed. It feels thinner than the "proper" residential butyl membrane seam seal tape (diameter of 50ft roll much less, so it probably is), but hopefully good enough to get an extra couple of years of extra protection.It went on good, I cleaned the membrane with first bleach spray, then gasoline and also properly primed it as I had to buy a gallon of primer (smallest amount the roofing store had available at the time - needed it for chimney re-flashing - figured since I have it and way more than I need for the chimney - why not). You want to stretch the tape a little before adhering it downwards onto the surface - it arrived a bit wrinkeled but with a little stretching that did not matter (you peel of 12 inches or so of the silicone tape, stretch those inches by pulling the roll with one hand and then use the other hand pressing the tape down onto the surface and rubbing it down. Then I used a rubber roller to properly roll out any air bubbles and give it some pressure. The biggest problem is the silicone cover tape - it always ripped at the edges and a piece kept sticking on the tape. I constantly had to remediate that. That breaks the flow of the work. With the twice as expensive US made tape that happened much less - though it happened there 2 or 3 times as well (I had bought both to see which one works better - the US brand worked better, also had a thicker feel to it, no sure, diameter of roll similar - US brand one seemed a little larger, but also twice as expensive - this tape was ok enough though and I did the remainder with this less expensive tape buying 2 more rolls).In any case, it adhered well and though it's not the proper residential roofing seam seal tape, it's probably a lot better than not having any tape on seams and termination at all. I have to see about aging - but currently with everything being new, it seems quite nice. The only "bad" thing was the constant tearing of the silicone cover tape while applying it. For another 5 years - this might be good enough - and probably much better than my original un-seam-sealed roof. Maybe even for longer?
J**L
Great tape
Super sticky. Little difficult pealing the backing off. Don't cut thumb nail.
F**I
Easy
So far I love it. Easy to cut ,aline,and install.
D**S
Good product
Works great and easy to peel off the backing
D**Y
Popup Camper Repair
Have an ABS sided popup camper that is showing it's age? Minor cracks are a frequent issue with these plastics. This product is the right answer for your problem!Had 2 cracks at the front corners of our camper that needed attention. Cleaned the surface before application with rubbing alcohol and let it completely dry. Stop drilled the end of the crack to keep it from spreading and caulked the hole. Cut a properly sized piece of the sealant tape, shaping it with kitchen scissors to help its appearance blend in and peeled the tape backing. The tape has excellent adhesion so you want to make sure of proper placement the first time. Once placed, use some form of burnishing tool to smooth out the tape over the repair, and you are good to go!These repairs are reliable and long lived, helping to prevent moisture penetration into the campers living spaces.Excellent product that has many potential uses for your sealing job, including roof repairs!Buy with confidence!
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