โFeb-20-2014 08:18 PM
โFeb-21-2014 01:35 PM
Dog Folks wrote:Our '74 Scotty had just one tank. We didn't like sharing though so we closed up the hole from the toilet and got a different toilet with a removable tank on the bottom - like a cassette toilet.69 Avion wrote:Dog Folks wrote:N7SJN wrote:
Does anyone have any experience with a single grey/black tank. I see some of the newer units have only the one tank and would like feed back. I do not boondock so capacity is not an issue, I've never had anything but the twin tanks so need more information from those who have a single tank. Thanks
Owned a 1966 Avion with a single tank.
We camped in state parks without sewer, and used dump stations. It wasn't a problem.
Most trailers back then only had a single tank. As I recall, most of them had a black water tank, and the gray water bypassed the black water tank and just dumped on the ground. That became illegal around the mid 1970s.
I wouldn't want a combined tank because as you travel the sink and shower "P" traps will empty and the sewer gas from the black water tank will end up in your camper. The gray water is bad enough, but nothing like the black water.
Maybe it wasn't stock, and someone changed it over the years but our '66 had both grey water and black water going into one tank.
โFeb-21-2014 01:35 PM
โFeb-21-2014 01:28 PM
69 Avion wrote:Dog Folks wrote:N7SJN wrote:
Does anyone have any experience with a single grey/black tank. I see some of the newer units have only the one tank and would like feed back. I do not boondock so capacity is not an issue, I've never had anything but the twin tanks so need more information from those who have a single tank. Thanks
Owned a 1966 Avion with a single tank.
We camped in state parks without sewer, and used dump stations. It wasn't a problem.
Most trailers back then only had a single tank. As I recall, most of them had a black water tank, and the gray water bypassed the black water tank and just dumped on the ground. That became illegal around the mid 1970s.
I wouldn't want a combined tank because as you travel the sink and shower "P" traps will empty and the sewer gas from the black water tank will end up in your camper. The gray water is bad enough, but nothing like the black water.
โFeb-21-2014 12:30 PM
beisner wrote:
If you drive down the road and the water in your sink or shower P-trap is not sufficient then you will know why the two tanks are separate.
โFeb-21-2014 12:01 PM
pdogg wrote:
I've watered many trees with Gray waste in many campgrounds... ๐
โFeb-21-2014 11:15 AM
N7SJN wrote:
Old-Biscuit, thinking of a newer Foretravel. Only one tank would not be a deal breaker for me, still interested in someone who has one. thanks
โFeb-21-2014 11:06 AM
Dog Folks wrote:N7SJN wrote:
Does anyone have any experience with a single grey/black tank. I see some of the newer units have only the one tank and would like feed back. I do not boondock so capacity is not an issue, I've never had anything but the twin tanks so need more information from those who have a single tank. Thanks
Owned a 1966 Avion with a single tank.
We camped in state parks without sewer, and used dump stations. It wasn't a problem.
โFeb-21-2014 10:52 AM
beemerphile1 wrote:pdogg wrote:
I've watered many trees with Gray waste in many campgrounds.
Us too. Back in the sixties and seventies many RVs only had a black tank. The gray tank consisted of a hose into the bushes.
โFeb-21-2014 09:53 AM
pdogg wrote:
I've watered many trees with Gray waste in many campgrounds.
โFeb-21-2014 09:21 AM
โFeb-21-2014 07:28 AM
โFeb-21-2014 06:51 AM
โFeb-21-2014 05:57 AM
โFeb-21-2014 05:44 AM
beisner wrote:
If you drive down the road and the water in your sink or shower P-trap is not sufficient then you will know why the two tanks are separate.