 Good morning, Canada. Squadron reel, Canada. It's a very exciting day, not because there's anything particularly exciting going on, but just because I say so. What do you mean? True. There's totally exciting things going on today. True. I think we're going to work on part of the subfloor today and we're going to try and get the window in. That's exciting. Because we don't have a... Because we're outdoors, we've basically been doing musical chairs with all of our equipment, so when you do a build, try and find something that has a place for all your stuff with no rain. In other words, don't do it outside in Alberta, Canada. Also, a side note, after a couple weeks of being sick, I finally feel absolutely 100% cleaning up the floors. And we're prepping for subfloors. We're using this stuff. Seven Gray used a stuff called Ice Shield. We're using Henry's brand something. Basically, the last bus I had, the sound insulation was very expensive. This whole roll, I think I mentioned it to you before. I got a deal. If not, it was funny. You should replay that video. 50 bucks. So we're just going to put it down. Mike's never used it before. What are your initial thoughts on it? It seems like the sound-freaking stuff I've used previously, it's pretty darn close for the cost, so I'm assuming it's going to work. Mike, by the way, didn't use sound insulation like this, but because of the density and thickness of floors and subfloors and having a different bus, this bus the engine is in front, so it's not as noisy as my previous bus. His bus is super quiet, but he also has a different engine and all kinds of freight liner, so I'm thinking about a freight liner on the next bus. Oh geez, he's already talking about the next one, huh? Isn't that weird? I always do that. Even on my first one, I'm like, yeah, I wonder what the next one's going to be. It's kind of like, I don't know, boys in their toys. Anyways, enough of you happen. Let's get to work. Tiki, once you fold it, here, let's see the other side. Once you fold it over, you can't get it out. So, when you're doing the wheel wise, this is our technique. I'm just going to cut another one and fill it in. But how cool is this stuff, huh? It feels interesting, right? It feels like it should work. So this is an ice shield. This is Henry's product, and it's a water barrier for the walls. Now, let's, here we go. Here's a real test, right? Here's without. Here's with. Yeah, a little different, right? So, I don't know. Whether it works or not, it's worth a 50 bucks or not. It's up to you. It's up to us. It's really subjective. Without any instrument tools, we have no measurement. It should work in theory. A little bit, right? Yeah, it should work. I mean, 50 bucks for 200 square feet, that's pretty cheap. I made a mistake. We have now demonstrated the wrong way to put this stuff on. Do not cut the whole length. We got it creased. We're going to do four to eight foot chunks. It's very tricky. Because putting this stuff on, you're just asking for trouble. This is a tutorial for yours, too. Yes. So let's roll out the next one. Okay. All right, so what do you think? Here is what this, I don't even know what to call it. I'm just going to call it noise control, right? Here's what the noise control, this particular product, as you can see, it's right there. I was looking for ice shield. They didn't have it in Canada, whatever. But as you can see, it has a whole different, even though it's very echoey up here, it has a whole different sound because it's there, right? It's all adhered. What are your thoughts on this stuff? It's definitely not the expensive stuff you can get, but for the cost, I'm thinking at the moment, it's worth the cost savings in terms of how many decibels are less made for cost. I mean, what did you get? This is like, well, you got for 50. Well, let's just say even the regular price stuff that's like 150 or whatever is one-tenth. One-tenth of cost, if you got like Dynamat Extreme Pro or whatever the heck that stuff's called, right? Because it's like special audio acoustic stuff. This is like a knockoff that's not exactly the same material, but one-tenth of cost, I happen to get 60% off just because it was like a trash roll. You can see it looks like, I don't know, some chipmunks ate it or something, right? But for the money, I mean, why not, right? For the money, it seems like it's going to do what you want and get the decibels down for you. I mean, everything helps. Yeah. And if it does absolutely nothing, or even just a little bit, it's 50 bucks. 50 bucks. It's not going to, if anything, it's a good waterproof barrier. It's one of the things, so here's the thing with the bus, right? Like, it's one of the things you can't upgrade. You can't go back and rip everything out and then decide later, like, oh, I want that on there. You either do it in the very beginning or you don't do it at all. But anyways, what are we about to do? We're going to water test the bus and make sure that every single window and seal is solid so then we can then start putting it in our wood. All right, let's get to work. Yeah. Lake testing the bus. We're looking for any issues. This was an issue, but we'll probably get that with more silicone. No big deal on that one. It's mimicking, driving in the rain. It's coming through the rivet itself. So we will adhesive, I'm not saying adhesive, you know what I'm saying, it's caulking and you just seal it up. Then that will be new. Anything else looks pretty good. These are the deck supports. There's nothing coming in here yet. So let's say so far, so good. This is back. Yeah. Bad chat the morning off. It was taking a little vacation. It's not really off. You're good. So now we're just going on the outside of the bus. Mike's spraying it. Yeah. Yeah. There's a little gap in there. You're good. That one's leaking. Oh, yeah. So we got a little leak there. Isn't that fun to see leaking before it puddles up after you're building? No. That's just a little, could be a gasket issue or who knows. Actually bad. Oh wait, no, that's not the problem. Yeah, minor. You're good. It's mostly, oh wait. Look at that leak right there. Look at that leak right there. So you know what we do with that leak? Let me just put a little mark on it. That's a big one. That's a good one. Yeah. That's a pretty big leak. Big leak. Got a big one here. Okay. That's a big one right there. Yeah. Yeah. All right, now we're moving on to this one. We got lots and lots and lots of caulking on that. I don't think it should be leaking. Let's just make sure you look up. You look over. Okay. Mike. Yes. Do you know the moral of the story? I'm pretty sure they call it leaks. My God, almost every single one of these things was leaking. And that's fine. So ladies and gentlemen, I don't know if Mike would agree with me or not, but I would recommend heavily caulking all of the windows. I would recommend that if your bus is organ like an 07, to most likely re-caulking windows, because this is what happens. Yeah. This is even after re-caulking. So I think, I'm not a pro, but the way these windows are made, there's like a little gap in between the metal and the outside. So I say we just stuff the corners full of caulking. What do you say? So you get the rims where we re-caulked, then you actually have the metal inside. Yeah, the actual window frame. So I was hoping that your windows were better shaped than it seems like they are. By the way, no caulking came from the part that we installed, which was like the part where it meets. It was in these corners. It was only the corners. And back here, if you see, well, guess what? We got a leak. And that is an old leak coming down there. That thing's been leaking for centuries. So it is a manufactured defect. Well, it's just, over time, they don't build these things the last for us to re-purpose them into homes. They build them to last for, you know, 10, 15 years. Yeah, this guy knows what he's talking about. It's absolutely correct.