Forum Discussion
DutchmenSport
Oct 05, 2016Explorer
I've been using non-white garden hoses ... well ... always.
I have 200 feet of hose I carry with me all the time (non-white) that is dedicated just for the camper.
My hoses are on a real, so this is really easy to do. I simply pour about a quart of household bleach into the hose and then begin turning the real. The bleach will flow down-hill as the real turns, pushing it's way all the way through the hose. I let it sit for about 5 minutes, then hook up to a water spigot and flush it out. I always keep both ends connected to each other to keep the inside clean.
Now, I'm using a pretty good hose, not an el-cheap-o like I use to do, and using the bleach clean the hose out and we've never had hose taste in the fresh water tank.
By now, germ-a-phobic folks reading are probably stroking out or holding their heart yelling, "This is the big one!"
I personally think the white hose syndrome is over-rated.
So, if you really want the water, fill the hose with bleach and make sure it passes through the entire hose. Flush it out, and you'll be OK. (really).
I'm 61 years old and STILL drink from the hose laying on the ground at my house.
To clean the RV tank, add a few gallons of water (like 10) and bleach. Drive the RV around so the water will slosh all over the tank. Run the bleach water through all your lines and let it sit for an hour or so. Then drain out your fresh tank, either with the on-board pump or the drain at the bottom of the tank and fill with fresh water and rinse it out. Finally flush fresh water though all the fresh water plumbing (via the fresh water tank) until the chlorine smell is gone.
I have 200 feet of hose I carry with me all the time (non-white) that is dedicated just for the camper.
My hoses are on a real, so this is really easy to do. I simply pour about a quart of household bleach into the hose and then begin turning the real. The bleach will flow down-hill as the real turns, pushing it's way all the way through the hose. I let it sit for about 5 minutes, then hook up to a water spigot and flush it out. I always keep both ends connected to each other to keep the inside clean.
Now, I'm using a pretty good hose, not an el-cheap-o like I use to do, and using the bleach clean the hose out and we've never had hose taste in the fresh water tank.
By now, germ-a-phobic folks reading are probably stroking out or holding their heart yelling, "This is the big one!"
I personally think the white hose syndrome is over-rated.
So, if you really want the water, fill the hose with bleach and make sure it passes through the entire hose. Flush it out, and you'll be OK. (really).
I'm 61 years old and STILL drink from the hose laying on the ground at my house.
To clean the RV tank, add a few gallons of water (like 10) and bleach. Drive the RV around so the water will slosh all over the tank. Run the bleach water through all your lines and let it sit for an hour or so. Then drain out your fresh tank, either with the on-board pump or the drain at the bottom of the tank and fill with fresh water and rinse it out. Finally flush fresh water though all the fresh water plumbing (via the fresh water tank) until the chlorine smell is gone.
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