โMay-28-2014 09:19 AM
โMay-31-2014 03:25 PM
DutchmenSport wrote:
Gorilla tape will probably do. I would not attempt to change it, since it's already there, but do keep an eye on it and if it does start to come off, then go to plan "B".
FYI, I never travel with water in my fresh tank for the very reason you just described. There's a lot of weight in those tanks, and then you add all the bumping up and down and water movement inside the tank, and ... well ... I've just never had confidence to travel with full tanks. Moving around the campground, no problem, 5, 10 mph, but at highway speeds, and highway bumps, and highway chuck holes and railroad tracks and such ... nah, not comfortable at all.
For longer trips, we take a separate 6 gallon jug of water for on-the road usage, and keep the tanks as empty as possible.
โMay-31-2014 07:54 AM
bobx2 wrote:
You guys that are afraid to haul water crack me up. Where I camp, you fill up at the house, or you do without. That's just dumb. Fill it up and go.
โMay-30-2014 06:35 AM
โMay-30-2014 04:34 AM
โMay-29-2014 03:59 PM
โMay-29-2014 02:51 PM
โMay-29-2014 02:10 PM
โMay-29-2014 12:30 PM
โMay-29-2014 08:25 AM
Homer wrote:
plus the cost of hauling H2O around, why do it?
โMay-29-2014 08:11 AM
โMay-29-2014 05:57 AM
Luke Porter wrote:
If they weren't built to haul the water, there would be all kinds of warning stickers and stuff. Same thing with the waste tanks. What's the sense of having the tanks if you can't move with something in them---hello??
โMay-29-2014 04:07 AM
Francesca Knowles wrote:
My achin' head...a year old rig that probably cost close to thirty thousand dollars, and the water tank falls out. The only bright spot here is that it didn't happen on the freeway.
โMay-28-2014 10:04 PM
โMay-28-2014 01:43 PM