โJul-13-2020 09:40 AM
โJul-22-2020 05:54 PM
valhalla360 wrote:schlep1967 wrote:
Plumbing the two dump hose connectors together is fine but you want to keep separate valves. Otherwise you essentially only have one big combined tank. Better separate so he can drain black and then flush the hose with grey.
Honestly, if I was rebuilding from scratch, I would lean towards a single valve.
As long as you use plenty of water when flushing, it shouldn't be a big issue if they all drain together.
But if you don't fully utilize the kitchen gray tank, you effectively get more storage for the black & shower as they will back up into the kitchen gray tank.
โJul-21-2020 10:15 AM
valhalla360 wrote:Alan_Hepburn wrote:
The issue isn't the water from a shower backing up - it's the other direction: the shower pan is the low point in the system, so if your single waste tank gets full the only place for it to go is into your shower pan, bringing with it whatever is in that single waste tank. I'm sure your wife would not appreciate it if she's taking a shower when that happens...
I usually look before stepping into the shower (as does my wife)...maybe it's just us.
But even if it is backing up into the gray tank for the shower, while it's not hermetically isolated, it's going to be shower water coming back up...and it's still going to be nasty either way.
Still not seeing how it's going to jump to the fresh water system.
โJul-16-2020 03:48 AM
Alan_Hepburn wrote:
The issue isn't the water from a shower backing up - it's the other direction: the shower pan is the low point in the system, so if your single waste tank gets full the only place for it to go is into your shower pan, bringing with it whatever is in that single waste tank. I'm sure your wife would not appreciate it if she's taking a shower when that happens...
โJul-15-2020 11:46 AM
valhalla360 wrote:
If you overfill your shower, it's shower water you are standing in (unless you've put a recirculating pump from the gray tank in).
โJul-14-2020 03:24 PM
โJul-14-2020 02:16 PM
โJul-14-2020 02:10 PM
4x4van wrote:
On the contrary. There are several reasons to keep them separate. First is, as has already been mentioned, the possibility of black tank smells coming through the sink and shower traps while driving. However, the biggest is that if you happen to overfill the grey, it comes up in the shower. It's one thing to have grey water in the shower, it's another entirely to have sewage in the shower.:(
โJul-14-2020 12:56 PM
valhalla360 wrote:
Only reason to keep them separate is if you are somewhere that only allows gray water dumping. At one time it was considered acceptable to dump gray water on the ground but not black water. That was many years ago...now it all needs to go into a dump station and I've yet to find one that has separate drains for Black vs Gray. Who cares if it's all a Black water tank?
โJul-14-2020 07:11 AM
โJul-13-2020 03:03 PM
โJul-13-2020 02:08 PM
C Schomer wrote:
BAD BAD IDEA! It's not just common sense and I can't recite them but there are strict codes to keep sewage and gray water isolated and handled properly and to protect your health and potable water! Back flow preventers, vacuum breakers, one inch minimum air gaps between any drain and water that even comes from a potable source and on and on, just for starters. Connecting black and gray would turn the entire drain system into a black system and that would be one step closer to contaminating the potable water. Sewage in sinks and showers, so close to the potable water system, not to mention sewage smell every time there was a dry trap. Unimaginable... don't do that to yourself! Craig
โJul-13-2020 01:21 PM
โJul-13-2020 12:04 PM
schlep1967 wrote:
Plumbing the two dump hose connectors together is fine but you want to keep separate valves. Otherwise you essentially only have one big combined tank. Better separate so he can drain black and then flush the hose with grey.
โJul-13-2020 11:16 AM