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cncdude
Explorer
Explorer
I have never put anything but soapy water down the sink. I put every thing else down into the black tank. Anyone drain canned food juice into the sink? Wonder if I am taking it to far.
Four Winds 33K
26 REPLIES 26

rockhillmanor
Explorer
Explorer
What do you do at home?
RV isn't any different....


Ahh I think it is!

Don't know about your house but my house didn't have holding tanks for sewage strapped under where my bed was!!!:B

At home my sewage waste and my food from a garbage disposal goes down a big ole 'sewer pipe' off to some far far away filtration plant where 'other people' have to deal with it.

In the RV they go into holding tanks strapped to the belly of my MH and "I" have to deal with the smells and removable of it. And at close range I might add. :W


Sooo, "I" prefer to make the upfront process as easy, odorless, non clogging, non sticking to the sides as possible.

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

hermandutchman
Explorer
Explorer
PastorCharlie wrote:
Slownsy wrote:
No garbage go in garbage bins not sinks.
Frank.


Your garbage disposal connects to your garbage bins?
we are talking about RVs . I have not seen rv with garbage disposal.

wbwood
Explorer
Explorer
Old-Biscuit wrote:
What do you do at home?

RV isn't any different.

Don't make RVng so complicated.........enjoy it!


Amen....but people might do things they shouldn't at home...lol
Brian
2013 Thor Chateau 31L

rockhillmanor
Explorer
Explorer
I put down a quart of a lemon cleaner after every couple of dumps helps keep the gray tank and the sensors clean and free from any odors.

I found every chain grocery store carries quart size lemon cleaner that costs just a buck usually found on the bottom shelves.

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

Caveman_Charlie
Explorer
Explorer
bee_46 wrote:
I avoid putting grease down either RV drain or the drain at home. We have a septic system at our house which includes a drain field. Grease can easily clog a drain field so I carefully drain large amounts of grease into a container and toss in the trash and wipe out lesser amount with paper towels or used napkins before washing.

It is easy to carry routines from the house to the RV.


X2
1993 Cobra Sunrise, 20 foot Travel Trailer.

bee_46
Explorer
Explorer
I avoid putting grease down either RV drain or the drain at home. We have a septic system at our house which includes a drain field. Grease can easily clog a drain field so I carefully drain large amounts of grease into a container and toss in the trash and wipe out lesser amount with paper towels or used napkins before washing.

It is easy to carry routines from the house to the RV.
Bobbie ๐Ÿ™‚

2003 Pleasure Way Excel TD

Alaska 2008

Arches, Geysers, and Canyons

PastorCharlie
Explorer
Explorer
Slownsy wrote:
No garbage go in garbage bins not sinks.
Frank.


Your garbage disposal connects to your garbage bins?

Lantley
Nomad
Nomad
Old-Biscuit wrote:
What do you do at home?

RV isn't any different.

Don't make RVng so complicated.........enjoy it!


RV is very different from home. When is the last time you dumped separate tanks at home?
The drains pipes maybe the same but from that point on it is very different.
I avoid solids,grease and scraps in gray tank as feasible.
I'll add if you did not eat it don't put it in the black tank.
19'Duramax w/hips, 2022 Alliance Paradigm 390MP >BD3,r,22" Blackstone
r,RV760 w/BC20,Glow Steps, Enduraplas25,Pedego
BakFlip,RVLock,Prog.50A surge ,Hughes autoformer
Porta Bote 8.0 Nissan, Sailun S637

Bobbo
Explorer II
Explorer II
Gray tank, no solids. That is my only rule.
Bobbo and Lin
2017 F-150 XLT 4x4 SuperCab w/Max Tow Package 3.5l EcoBoost V6
2017 Airstream Flying Cloud 23FB

Geocritter
Explorer
Explorer
When I first purchased my RV there was so much congealed grease on the floor of the grey water tank that it effectively sealed an 18" long crack located in the tank floor. That is it sealed it until I tried to actually store grey water in the tank rather than just letting it pass through to the drain. It didn't take much water pressure to breach the congealed grease seal and start the tank leaking. I've since replaced the tank.

Anyone who wants to dump grease down their drain, go ahead your plumber will appreciate the future work.

Steve

We_Cant_Wait
Explorer
Explorer
Even at our S&B we do not put ANY grease down the sink drain it goes down the toilet. Reason being 1) larger drain, 2) grease will congeal when it hits the cold water in the toilet form small gelled balls and then flush down with no problem. Got this from a plumber who said that if you must put grease down a drain do it with COLD water not hot. As to no food down the sink in the MH, we try to prevent this as much as possible without being anal about it. Food down the sink drain can and will cause the grey tank to stink as much if not worse then the black tank.

Padlin
Explorer
Explorer
I use the tanks for what they were intended, human waste in the black, sink and shower runoff in the grey. Compared to us, you're taking it too far. But then many do.

Who cares what others do, it's your trailer, do what you want.
Happy Motoring
Bob & Deb

W Ma.
12 F150 HD SCAB EcoBoost LB 4x4
14 Escape 5.0 TA

C-Bears
Explorer
Explorer
We are probably in the middle of the road on this one. The septic system on an RV is not the same as the SticknBrick, and anyone who says it is either has never actually spent much time RVing or didn't understand the OP question, or maybe both.

We don't use a screen in the bottom of our sinks, but that isn't a bad idea. We are careful and try not to let grease and large food pieces get down the drains.

I go through my regular flush cycle when dropping my black tank, followed by the two gray tanks. I will also close the gate valves to the black and one gray, leave one gray open, and use my Flush King to flush that gray out several times. Then I will reverse the two gate valves and flush the other gray tank out several times. On occasion we will use a gray tank additive to closed gray tanks also.

I just think you have to use some caution on what goes into the gray tanks and no matter what they should be flushed out once and awhile.
2014 Montana 3725RL (Goodyear G614 Tires, Flow Thru TPMS)

SPENDING THE WINTERS AT OUR HOME IN SW FLORIDA. THE REST OF THE YEAR SEEING THE U.S. FROM OUR LIVING ROOM WINDOW!

Sprink-Fitter
Explorer
Explorer
rockhillmanor wrote:
2gypsies wrote:
The things we avoided putting in the gray tank were grease, food scraps and coffee grounds. We wipe the plates/pots quickly wipe our used napkins or used paper towels before they go in the dish water.

If you are one to hook up the sewer hose and leave your gray water valve open all the time you'll be able to see the greasy sludge left behind when you peek in that sewer hose. That same sludge would be in the bottom of your tank. Gray tanks can smell worse than black.


X2

Absolutely no food stuffs or grease down an RV sink. This is NOT your stick and bricks kitchen sink with a grease trap and sewer lines that go somewhere else!

Also pick up one of these for your sink.


How many homes have grease traps, we live in a house, not a restaurant.



Old-Biscuit wrote:
What do you do at home?

RV isn't any different.

Don't make RVng so complicated.........enjoy it!


X2 some people way overthink things.
2006 Coachman Adrenaline 228FB

2012 Can Am Commander XT 1000