Sharon_is_SAM, I was referring to the panel in the picture below that has the large oval cut out of it. Notice the crack along the far left side edge, there's one on the right to. The access panel screws into place and leaves a similar crack. Now if water goes past the crack in the access panel, it will head right for the crack in the panel that you see below and water will sit on the plys of the plywood. But if the crack you see below is caulked, the water drains down to the toilet that has a seal that will let the water come out onto the toilet and be wiped up. So when I looked at it, I figured the thing to do was caulk the sides of the inside panel you see below. Granted, unless you use the shower a lot, and actively spray all around, its probably not a big problem but I was just being thorough. It would be interesting to know if NuCamp's manufacturing process actually has them caulk things this way. When I studied the shower stall, I noted that they did take the time to caulk everything else which tells me they are interested in stopping water exposure to the edges of the wall material.
@mntrails and @BywaysNW, would it make sense to put some very thin weather-stripping (maybe a really thin rubber seal) along the inside edges of the removable panel to prevent water intrusion through the panel edges, or is that not necessary? I'm thinking the top edge of the panel may not be an issue (since it appears to be flush up under the edge of the sink), but weather-stripping would be a way around caulking that panel along the right and left side edges (although the area of the sink cabinet that butts up against the wall does need to be caulked, regardless of how you deal with the removable panel.) The bottom edge of the removable panel might not be an issue since water would presumably drain off onto the top of the toilet, as already noted.
@Bayliss, weather stripping might work but I have to say that NuCamp has that panel cut to fit pretty snuggly (which is good). Also, its a hard plastic panel so there's no issue of water on the edges like there is with the interior plywood panel. As far as the top edge goes, the sink has an overhang and the bottom edge actually extends down another 3/16 of an inch or so like a drip edge. Honestly, I think they have it figured out pretty well. I had a tube of Kwik Seal out for a different purpose and it took just a couple minutes to run a bead down each edge of that interior panel. The longest part was letting it dry :-).
I check it daily when in use (400 tanknis easy to check). Quick glance to ensure it's at proper level. If it drops below minimums or is discolored it's likely time for maintenance.
Comments
(Alde: 3020; Refrig: Isotherm Cruise 65 Eleg; Battery: BB 100Ah LiFePo4; Solar: Renogy 100Ah Suitcase; Victron BMV-712; Pwr Cntr: PD-4135KW2B; EMS: PI-HW30C)
Greg & Marlene (Tucson, AZ)
(Alde: 3020; Refrig: Isotherm Cruise 65 Eleg; Battery: BB 100Ah LiFePo4; Solar: Renogy 100Ah Suitcase; Victron BMV-712; Pwr Cntr: PD-4135KW2B; EMS: PI-HW30C)
Greg & Marlene (Tucson, AZ)
https://tab-rv.vanillacommunity.com/discussion/10594/2021-400-bdl-has-arrived/p1
Factory Victron Solar; Norcold 3-way fridge
'04 Chevy Tahoe Z71 DinoKiller
San Diego, CA
www.airbossone.com
https://fineartamerica.com/profiles/owen-ashurst/shop