Quote:
quote:Originally posted by richfaa
yes the thing to do is to let Keystone slid on a manufacturing defect. Repair it yourself and forget about it till the next defect pops up then let keystone slide on that one.
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The repair tip that Ozz suggested would probably work with the staple issue, plus it would not be detectable that a repair had taken place. But what if those staples missed hitting what they were meant to hold down, and that leads to portions of the roof coming up in the future.
Rich is correct, this is a defect in the way they are putting these things together. It can't be blamed on Norold, Atwood, or anyone else.
I guess what really makes me not want to let go of this issue is the fact that one owner can show up at a rally in Goshen and they take one look at some of his raised staples and can't wait to fix them. Then others, still under factory warranty make claims and basically Keystone says "yep, we will fix yours, as soon as those staples rip through your roof and you start seeing water pouring in".