Forum Discussion
longislandcampe
Oct 31, 2023Explorer
I’m really not concerned about it freezing because I wouldn’t be using the water line in the winter. How bout the following setup.
Have a splitter on my outdoor spigot. One side for regular garden hose and one side for the camper. The camper side is hooked up using a short run of pex which then connects to copper tubing running underground for about 75’ to another spigot for the camper.
This would solve the buried pex problem with it getting chewed up. I already have the fittings to attach to the camper water inlet to blow out the lines with my compressor. Couldn’t I simply unscrew the regular garden hose side, attach my compressor to that side, open all the water valves and blow the line out in the fall? I just need a new fitting to attach to that side.
This side of the house is north facing so it gets no sun. If I have to replace a few feet of pex every so often then that’s no biggie.
What do you think?
Have a splitter on my outdoor spigot. One side for regular garden hose and one side for the camper. The camper side is hooked up using a short run of pex which then connects to copper tubing running underground for about 75’ to another spigot for the camper.
This would solve the buried pex problem with it getting chewed up. I already have the fittings to attach to the camper water inlet to blow out the lines with my compressor. Couldn’t I simply unscrew the regular garden hose side, attach my compressor to that side, open all the water valves and blow the line out in the fall? I just need a new fitting to attach to that side.
This side of the house is north facing so it gets no sun. If I have to replace a few feet of pex every so often then that’s no biggie.
What do you think?
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