Forum Discussion

Bulletboy's avatar
Bulletboy
Explorer
Jun 19, 2015

GPM WATER INLET

Hey guys, this is a bit of a take off from a previous topic I had. Anyway...what is the max inlet (GPM) your freshwater inlet can accept on a TT. I want to hook up a sump pump to a 55 gallon drum and pump it straight to my Travel Trailer. I found one that does 1300GMH but I'm thinking that's still too much as a garden hose only does approx 300GPH. I know there's lots of small utility pumps out there but can't find anything under $100. This sump is only $40.....your thoughts are appreciated
  • Depending on the initial pressure and length, a typical 1/2" garden hose will provide something like 5-10 gpm. The problem will be the city water inlet and if you look inside it, the check valve which will be rather restrictive. Maybe 2-3 gpm?? I actually removed the check valve in ours, enlarged the opening and installed a new and larger check valve inside to get better flow.
  • path1 wrote:
    Don't know what the rush is??? Be careful of your vent tube, most vent tubes are just vinyl hose and a little plastic barbed fitting with a hose clamp around it. Mine fell off on time and it was a son of a gun to get back on because of no room to get hose clamp tight. After that I don't put a lot of pressure when (re-filling) or better stated displacing air inside the tank with water.

    I picked up one of these.

    http://www.harborfreight.com/12-volt-marine-utility-water-pump-94639.html


    I thought is might be good for maybe 1 or 2 seasons. That was probably 5 years ago. I'm surprised it still works for the price I paid for it.
    .


    I hooked a pump like this up to a clean sealed plastic 55 gal drum and it worked well for 3-4 years before it quit. The experiment showed me it was well worth it so I replaced the pump with similar unit that could act as a replacement pump. I can also hose into the city water supply and use the water directly from the drum.
  • Don't know what the rush is??? Be careful of your vent tube, most vent tubes are just vinyl hose and a little plastic barbed fitting with a hose clamp around it. Mine fell off on time and it was a son of a gun to get back on because of no room to get hose clamp tight. After that I don't put a lot of pressure when (re-filling) or better stated displacing air inside the tank with water.

    I picked up one of these.

    http://www.harborfreight.com/12-volt-marine-utility-water-pump-94639.html


    I thought is might be good for maybe 1 or 2 seasons. That was probably 5 years ago. I'm surprised it still works for the price I paid for it.

    I've re-filled by running campground faucet into bucket and then hose from pump into bucket then transfer to RV.

    I've re-filled by using 5 gallon water bottles from store then use pump to transfer to rv.

    etc, etc

    Then do come with sort of short wires, maybe 4 or 5 feet, battery cables helped me out couple of times.

    I'd buy again.
  • pumps are rated in gph / gpm and by pressure.
    Sump pumps deliver high volume at low pressure. They wont do much through a garden hose. Little pressure, you see?
    For a transfer pump find one that gives a lower gpm with a higher pressure.
  • I would get an RV water pump made for potable water. Get same as you have to double as a spare.

    Why the rush? Does it matter if it takes 20 minutes to transfer 50 gallons?

    RV waterpump on Amazon