โFeb-10-2020 03:24 AM
โFeb-10-2020 01:34 PM
wopachop wrote:
My friends all make fun of me for putting computer fans in weird spots.
I'm gonna mount one on top my black tank vent!! At some point I meant to get a reversible fan for the bathroom roof vent. Same idea of keeping odors from rising out the toilet.
I never add chemical. Winter time it's no big deal. Summer temps i was having problems with what I think was gray tank smells. You guys told me to check the vent under the sink. I covered it with a plastic bag last year to test.
Will have to see how it goes this summer.
I think my trailer has tank vent caps that use wind to suck odors out the tank. Doesn't seem to work.
There was a time I goofed up and forgot to dump. Had the trailer on a jobsite. Flushing produced bad smells. Wish I had thought to put a fan on top the black tank vent.
โFeb-10-2020 01:21 PM
โFeb-10-2020 01:11 PM
way2roll wrote:ScottG wrote:
Water alone is not going to keep a tank full of sewage from smelling.
And it's just that; a tank. So when you open a hole in the top of it (like flushing) there's nothing to keep gasses from rising up out of the hole. There's no reason those gasses are going to choose to go up the vent rather than the toilet opening.
25 cents worth of chems (or less, I bought a lifetime supply at a garage sale for $2) and there is no smell.
Disagree. Water only for the past 7 years. Flush the tanks, use plenty of water each time I flush and always keep a few inches of water in the tank at a minimum. No smell.
โFeb-10-2020 11:44 AM
ScottG wrote:
Water alone is not going to keep a tank full of sewage from smelling.
And it's just that; a tank. So when you open a hole in the top of it (like flushing) there's nothing to keep gasses from rising up out of the hole. There's no reason those gasses are going to choose to go up the vent rather than the toilet opening.
25 cents worth of chems (or less, I bought a lifetime supply at a garage sale for $2) and there is no smell.
โFeb-10-2020 11:21 AM
โFeb-10-2020 11:09 AM
โFeb-10-2020 10:57 AM
โFeb-10-2020 10:53 AM
โFeb-10-2020 09:22 AM
โFeb-10-2020 09:08 AM
โFeb-10-2020 08:59 AM
โFeb-10-2020 08:51 AM
wopachop wrote:
I wonder how many campgrounds are on septic and have issues from different chemicals?
โFeb-10-2020 08:43 AM
way2roll wrote:
Can't find anywhere what the list of ingredients are- Not on their website, google search, nothing. (material safety data sheet) Happy Campers consists of Zinc salts and unnamed materials. Happy Camper is a highly concentrated monohydrate (which is a fancy way of saying there is one molecule of water per molecule of the rest of the ingredients). blend of minerals and micro nutrients. Curious why they don't tell you what those micro nutrients are. I'm always cautious of products labelled as "organic" and "natural" as those claims are not really regulated and are used a lot in marketing and further cautious when it's really hard to find out what's actually in it.
โFeb-10-2020 08:30 AM
โFeb-10-2020 08:21 AM
DFord wrote:way2roll wrote:
Can't find anywhere what the list of ingredients are- Not on their website, google search, nothing. (material safety data sheet) Happy Campers consists of Zinc salts and unnamed materials. Happy Camper is a highly concentrated monohydrate (which is a fancy way of saying there is one molecule of water per molecule of the rest of the ingredients). blend of minerals and micro nutrients. Curious why they don't tell you what those micro nutrients are. I'm always cautious of products labelled as "organic" and "natural" as those claims are not really regulated and are used a lot in marketing and further cautious when it's really hard to find out what's actually in it.
Good point. How many other treatment chemicals publish their material data sheets? Has Coke ever published a list of their ingredients?