โSep-05-2019 09:05 PM
โSep-12-2019 03:18 PM
Lynnmor wrote:FLY 4 FUN wrote:
I find this thread interesting. Our fifth wheel also has a pressure fill and valves to determine city water/system use/winterize etc. Last year I started noticing that when I fill the tank to capacity it would drain WAY longer than it used to when tap shut off at house. I would get to campsite and notice my "idiot light" was showing 2/3 tank. Not trusting it I ignored it. Now I show up at a campsite and find I can add 1 or 2 6 gallon jerry cans to what I believed was a full tank. In addition our family following us on road trips notes that we lose water on left turns and not just a little...looked like smoke coming off the tires. The last time I topped off the tank I noted water coming out overflow but when I got under the rig there is actually two red "overflow" tubes with one coming out hard/fast and the other trickling out. I wonder why there is two tubes? Is one an overflow and the other the breather tube? I would really like to understand them and may have to pull the coroplast to see whats changed as it used to just drain off a gallon or two as the tank was full and somewhat pressurized.
There are two VENT tubes to prevent pressurizing the fresh water tank. With a connection to city water, the incoming pressure can be quite high and the RV manufacturer does not supply a regulator. Two vents give greater capacity for out flowing air and also adds redundancy in case of one becoming restricted. NEVER add valves to these vents, if you ever forget to open them when filling, the tank will expand causing considerable damage. If you pump water from an unvented tank it will collapse and possibly dislodge from the supports. If your check valve in the water pump or the fill valve leaks, that too will fill the tank when connected to city water so the vents need to work always.
The fact that you didn't see the water spilling out in the past was just a matter of chance, straight roads cause less spilling.
The answer is to run the vents up and out of the coach well above the water level.
I added a gravity fill port of the hatch type. The elbows at the top are the required vents. The small holes in the door act as an insect screen and allows venting with the door closed and locked. The fill hose was attached to the tank by spin welding a hose barb to it.
โSep-12-2019 01:31 PM
FLY 4 FUN wrote:
I find this thread interesting. Our fifth wheel also has a pressure fill and valves to determine city water/system use/winterize etc. Last year I started noticing that when I fill the tank to capacity it would drain WAY longer than it used to when tap shut off at house. I would get to campsite and notice my "idiot light" was showing 2/3 tank. Not trusting it I ignored it. Now I show up at a campsite and find I can add 1 or 2 6 gallon jerry cans to what I believed was a full tank. In addition our family following us on road trips notes that we lose water on left turns and not just a little...looked like smoke coming off the tires. The last time I topped off the tank I noted water coming out overflow but when I got under the rig there is actually two red "overflow" tubes with one coming out hard/fast and the other trickling out. I wonder why there is two tubes? Is one an overflow and the other the breather tube? I would really like to understand them and may have to pull the coroplast to see whats changed as it used to just drain off a gallon or two as the tank was full and somewhat pressurized.
โSep-12-2019 12:41 PM
โSep-11-2019 10:50 AM
MURPHY55347 wrote:
Yesterday they put a loop of tubing in the vent line that went above the tank then down. Gave me the coach back and said all would be good. No way it could siphon with a loop above the tank.
The way it appears now the tank is somehow pressurized.
โSep-11-2019 07:47 AM
โSep-11-2019 06:28 AM
MURPHY55347 wrote:
So we have a Winnebago Motorhome purchased last year. (snip)
โSep-11-2019 06:19 AM
Lynnmor wrote:MURPHY55347 wrote:
Today the change the angle of the 4โ piece of tubing and raised it about an inch. Drove home and it appears to have worked. Will want to test more before any cheering. What I am still questioning is what part the gravity fill port might have to do with this.
The spill will continue till the water level drops to the vent port. Running the vent up hill by 1" will reduce spillage a bit. If the trailer leans to the side where the vent is connected, the spill will start, if leaning the opposite way there will be no spill.
A gravity fill system has a vent and fill pipe well above water level and that is why they work. A pressure fill system needs to have vents well above water level, but that would cost a few dollars that the manufacturers will not spend.
The manufacturer that I fought with changed back to gravity fill to fix the problem, but they still have no clue why water only runs downhill.
If you think that your problem is fixed, have a car follow close behind on a curvy mountain road so they can record the spillage. Yes, I did that.
โSep-11-2019 06:04 AM
MURPHY55347 wrote:
Today the change the angle of the 4โ piece of tubing and raised it about an inch. Drove home and it appears to have worked. Will want to test more before any cheering. What I am still questioning is what part the gravity fill port might have to do with this.
โSep-10-2019 08:02 PM
โSep-10-2019 06:40 PM
Lantley wrote:
...this is the RV world where proper design and construction is low on the priority list.
โSep-10-2019 03:26 PM
โSep-10-2019 11:21 AM
โSep-10-2019 11:13 AM
Lantley wrote:
My set up does not gravity fill. You can fill via a pressurized water hose or via a bucket using the on board pump. Filling is not a problem. I have a 80 gallon fresh tank,filling via gravity would be a PIA.
My overflow and vent tube both exit beneath the fresh tank.If you overfill the fresh tank a siphon will/can start. Once started the siphon can dump a lot of water on the ground.
iIhave resolved this issue by installing valves on my drain and siphon lines
โSep-09-2019 07:11 AM
Lantley wrote:Lynnmor wrote:
I have been thru this too many times before. The reason that things never change is that too many have no idea how things work.
Is it up to the buyer to understand how to correctly pipe a fresh tank?
Do I need to submit my own drawings at time of purchase?