โMay-22-2014 06:05 AM
โMay-22-2014 04:33 PM
โMay-22-2014 04:16 PM
DatacomGuy wrote:
You know the kind.. $15-20, attach to a hose.. I'm assuming used through the toilet to clean the black tank.
Worth it? Any better techniques to keeping the blank tank clean?
โMay-22-2014 04:05 PM
downtheroad wrote:BarneyS wrote:
In my opinion, the "down the toilet wand" is the best way to really get all the "stuff" out of your black tank.
Barney
Even though we have a factory installed black tank flush, I have to agree with this. The down the toilet wand does a better job..
Downside is you have to drag a hose through you rig. and it's best if your toilet is a straight drop to the tank.
โMay-22-2014 03:44 PM
Effy wrote:
As others have said, water, water, water. the more you use, the better the dump will be.
โMay-22-2014 03:43 PM
vic46 wrote:GMT830 wrote:
One of the easiest ways to keep the black tank under control is to let if fill as much as possible before dumping. That will allow the solids to soften and breakdown as much as possible.
If you are just doing weekends and don't use the toilet much and have another trip planned soon, just leave it and dump next time. If you must dump, hold the toilet fill valve open and let the tank fill while you are doing other chores packing up to to go. When we left our last trip of last season I wentso far as to tip the trailer sideways and uphill to get a thorough drain. After the initial drain I closed the valve and put another 15-20 gallons water in and rinsed again. It was pretty clean by that point.
Do not add bleach to the tank, especially mid-season. It will kill the bacteria and slow down the breaking of solids.
I will repeat it again though, don't drain the black tank until it's full. Save you all kinds of problems
The tank is a HOLDING tank not a septic tank. The degree of solid break down is minimal at best and not the intent of a holding tank. The breakdown process is a long term proposition that occurs in septic tanks. One can use bleach as the enzimes that do the breakdown of solids are likely nonexistent in a holding tank.
โMay-22-2014 10:24 AM
โMay-22-2014 10:13 AM
โMay-22-2014 10:05 AM
DatacomGuy wrote:
Camping world has a faucet connection kit.. $8 on sale.. Hooks the wand right up to the faucet, instead of running a hose around. Seems worth it.
โMay-22-2014 10:00 AM
DatacomGuy wrote:
Camping world has a faucet connection kit.. $8 on sale.. Hooks the wand right up to the faucet, instead of running a hose around. Seems worth it.
โMay-22-2014 08:53 AM
GMT830 wrote:
One of the easiest ways to keep the black tank under control is to let if fill as much as possible before dumping. That will allow the solids to soften and breakdown as much as possible.
If you are just doing weekends and don't use the toilet much and have another trip planned soon, just leave it and dump next time. If you must dump, hold the toilet fill valve open and let the tank fill while you are doing other chores packing up to to go. When we left our last trip of last season I wentso far as to tip the trailer sideways and uphill to get a thorough drain. After the initial drain I closed the valve and put another 15-20 gallons water in and rinsed again. It was pretty clean by that point.
Do not add bleach to the tank, especially mid-season. It will kill the bacteria and slow down the breaking of solids.
I will repeat it again though, don't drain the black tank until it's full. Save you all kinds of problems
โMay-22-2014 08:03 AM
downtheroad wrote:BarneyS wrote:
In my opinion, the "down the toilet wand" is the best way to really get all the "stuff" out of your black tank.
Barney
Even though we have a factory installed black tank flush, I have to agree with this. The down the toilet wand does a better job..
Downside is you have to drag a hose through you rig. and it's best if your toilet is a straight drop to the tank.
โMay-22-2014 07:44 AM
โMay-22-2014 07:41 AM
โMay-22-2014 07:41 AM
BarneyS wrote:
In my opinion, the "down the toilet wand" is the best way to really get all the "stuff" out of your black tank.
Barney
โMay-22-2014 07:40 AM