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Dewinterizing

brentbullets
Explorer
Explorer
Dewinterized this afternoon and sanitized water system. I know that the bleach and water should sit in tank and plumbing for a few hours but my question is can it be in there too long? My camper is over an hour from my home and we are coming up on Saturday to clean and restock camper. Is it OK to leave the bleach in the system until then?

Thanks in advance.
13 REPLIES 13

Harvey51
Explorer
Explorer
All this talk of sanitizing makes me wonder if I need to sanitize the water system in our house, which is on town water supply. Same thing, really, chlorinated water flows in, some is stored in a large hot water tank before use. I know the insides of the copper pipes are dirty after 50 years of use. Does the fresh flow of chlorinated water eliminate bacteria in the pipes? Or might this be evolving some strains that are immune to chlorine?
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rockhillmanor
Explorer
Explorer
Bartender's well under the bar where there is a spinning brush. No high temp heated water in that well. Health department requires a certain disinfecting non foaming soap to be used at all times to disinfect.

We must be willing to get rid of the life we've planned,
so as to have the life that is waiting for us.

beemerphile1
Explorer
Explorer
rockhillmanor wrote:

...Go to any 'restaurant supply house' they have the 'best' sanitizing products that work way beyond what bleach does. Health dept's kinda require they use them....


When I was in the restaurant biz in the 1970's there were two types of dishwashers. One kind had an over 180 degree F rinse cycle. The other had a reservoir filled with regular bleach which mixed it into the rinse cycle.
Build a life you don't need a vacation from.

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mlts22
Explorer
Explorer
There is a sanitizer used for homebrew equipment that works well with killing bugs.

I use bleach because it is easy to get and not too expensive... and it does the job extremely well.

brentbullets
Explorer
Explorer
Thanks for all the responses.

rockhillmanor
Explorer
Explorer
If you don't like the smell of bleach. Bleach is NOT the only way to sanitize a water holding tank.

1. Thetford makes a fresh water tank sanitizer.

2. Go to any 'restaurant supply house' they have the 'best' sanitizing products that work way beyond what bleach does. Health dept's kinda require they use them!

I do not drink or use water from the holding tank or to prepare foods with. It's a porous not sealed holding tank that takes on the ambient temperature of whatever the out side weather is. Warm=bacteria.

I do clean my fresh tank thoroughly and regularly to keep bacteria and sediment out and at a minimum. Since I do use it to shower!

We must be willing to get rid of the life we've planned,
so as to have the life that is waiting for us.

beemerphile1
Explorer
Explorer
I always leave it in for 24 hours, but I can't imagine longer would hurt anything.
Build a life you don't need a vacation from.

2016 Silverado 3500HD DRW D/A 4x4
2018 Keystone Cougar 26RBS
2006 Weekend Warrior FK1900

stuplich
Explorer
Explorer
brentbullets wrote:
Dewinterized this afternoon and sanitized water system. I know that the bleach and water should sit in tank and plumbing for a few hours but my question is can it be in there too long? My camper is over an hour from my home and we are coming up on Saturday to clean and restock camper. Is it OK to leave the bleach in the system until then?

Thanks in advance.


brentbullets
If you used the recommended "bleach to water solution" it doesn't hurt to leave it in.

BTW, my fresh water system has been "sanitized" only twice.
Once in '96 when the coach was new and once at 16 years of age, (at 125k miles), when a "sulfur stink" developed in the water heater.

Mel
'96 Safari

rockhillmanor
Explorer
Explorer
westend wrote:
.... If you still have bleach odor after rinsing, put a solution of baking soda through the system.


Good tip I didn't know that. Guess you can teach an old dog new tricks! :B

We must be willing to get rid of the life we've planned,
so as to have the life that is waiting for us.

westend
Explorer
Explorer
Diluted bleach in your plumbing system needs time to develop the amine of sodium hypochlorite to kill bacteria. IOW, it is not the bleach that directly kills all bacteria but a chemical that is made by the bleach. Leaving it in your system for more than 12 hrs. will allow it to work effectively. If you still have bleach odor after rinsing, put a solution of baking soda through the system.
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CaptPicky
Explorer
Explorer
I used to much bleach and let it sit to long ( you know if a little is good a bunch is better syndrome). Took forever for the bleach smell to get out of the system.
Retired Firefighter, Inspector, Investigator
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donn0128
Explorer II
Explorer II
The problem is that you then will want to drain the tank and refill it with clean water and pump that through the system until there is no more chlorine smell. IMHO leaving bleach water sit in the system for 30 minutes or so is sufficient for all but the nastiest of bugs.

spoon059
Explorer II
Explorer II
It shouldn't cause any problems. The bleach solution loses its effectiveness after 24 hours or so. Any bacteria should be long since killed by then though.
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