โMar-18-2019 04:11 PM
โAug-21-2019 09:59 AM
bedpan wrote:
I will be there this week or early next... I will see what they have to say...
Thanks..dougrainer wrote:4x4van wrote:
??? I've never heard of a floating check valve in a black (or grey) tank vent. I can see no reason for a manufacturer to install one; The only way to "overfill" the black tank is with the rinser, and in that case, it would be better to have the overflow go out onto the roof rather than overpressurizing and dropping (like yours did) or even splitting the black tank open, or flowing out through the toilet (or bathroom sink if plumbed that way). Sounds like a made-up excuse by the dealer. :S
Have that dealer show you that floating check valve. In 40 years working on RV's and dropping countless tanks, I have NEVER seen anything inside a tank or connected to a Vent system in or around the tank. Every week, I think I cannot find something new that a Dealer/Tech/ customer posts that is BS. Well, this makes my week:B Doug
โAug-21-2019 05:33 AM
dougrainer wrote:4x4van wrote:
??? I've never heard of a floating check valve in a black (or grey) tank vent. I can see no reason for a manufacturer to install one; The only way to "overfill" the black tank is with the rinser, and in that case, it would be better to have the overflow go out onto the roof rather than overpressurizing and dropping (like yours did) or even splitting the black tank open, or flowing out through the toilet (or bathroom sink if plumbed that way). Sounds like a made-up excuse by the dealer. :S
Have that dealer show you that floating check valve. In 40 years working on RV's and dropping countless tanks, I have NEVER seen anything inside a tank or connected to a Vent system in or around the tank. Every week, I think I cannot find something new that a Dealer/Tech/ customer posts that is BS. Well, this makes my week:B Doug
โAug-21-2019 05:14 AM
4x4van wrote:
??? I've never heard of a floating check valve in a black (or grey) tank vent. I can see no reason for a manufacturer to install one; The only way to "overfill" the black tank is with the rinser, and in that case, it would be better to have the overflow go out onto the roof rather than overpressurizing and dropping (like yours did) or even splitting the black tank open, or flowing out through the toilet (or bathroom sink if plumbed that way). Sounds like a made-up excuse by the dealer. :S
โAug-20-2019 03:26 PM
โAug-20-2019 11:53 AM
โMar-20-2019 04:54 PM
4x4van wrote:
IF the tank is overfilled and the vent pipe is completely filled all the way to the roof, it will only exert about 3 psi, not 45 psi. (Water weighs 0.036127 lbs/cu. in., and there is less than 148 cu. in. of volume in a 7' x 1.5" pipe; that equals just 5.36 lbs, or 3 psi) But since there was no water coming off the roof, that means that the vent pipe was NOT filled with water. The OP also says that the tank never filled completely.
In any case, the tank fell out, which should never have happened. If the tank "expanded" because of pressure, then there was an obstruction in the vent pipe. If the tank dropped out simply because of the weight of a nearly full tank (which changed the shape), then there is a major problem with the tank supports.
Since every RV I've owned over the past 30 years has had the tank(s) supported with much more than just L brackets along the sides, my gut says that the manufacturer left out some additional supports that should've spanned the bottom of the tank. Filling a long/wide, but short tank without supporting the bottom will obviously result in the bottom of the tank sagging, and that sagging pulled the sides in enough to slip past the L-brackets supporting the edges of the tank.
At least that's how I'm seeing it, YMMV.
โMar-20-2019 02:50 PM
โMar-20-2019 09:02 AM
โMar-20-2019 05:50 AM
โMar-20-2019 05:14 AM
โMar-20-2019 02:29 AM
wnjj wrote:dougrainer wrote:
IF the OP is HONEST and tells the Dealer what happened, then odds are the factory will deny any warranty. It is not the dealer that makes the decision on covered warranty items, it is the Factory. The fact is, the OP did something wrong, and he should shoulder blame and cost. Doug
There's nothing wrong with filling the black tank with fresh water, even if through an non-standard means. The flow rate of the hose should be easily offset by the vent. If it cannot handle being full of water with 5 psi, it never will when travelling down the road.
โMar-19-2019 08:52 PM
dougrainer wrote:
Offset??? Fill your Black tank to full with the water coming up the toilet tube. Shut off the water, open the Toilet to flush, let it close, Then start the Black flush again. Wait 1 minute, Then flush the toilet. Hope you have a rain suit on as the water will spray all over the bath and ceiling of the bath. ALL from that supposed 5 psi:B
โMar-19-2019 06:15 PM
โMar-19-2019 06:12 PM
bedpan wrote:
My thoughts as well, thanks wnjj..
I will have a discussion with the dealer at some point when I have sometime... The reality is it maybe easier for me to fix the vent, or add supports then the time it takes to hookup and drive 45 minutes up the road twice, to drop off and then pickup. Worth the discussion non the less..wnjj wrote:dougrainer wrote:
IF the OP is HONEST and tells the Dealer what happened, then odds are the factory will deny any warranty. It is not the dealer that makes the decision on covered warranty items, it is the Factory. The fact is, the OP did something wrong, and he should shoulder blame and cost. Doug
There's nothing wrong with filling the black tank with fresh water, even if through an non-standard means. The flow rate of the hose should be easily offset by the vent. If it cannot handle being full of water with 5 psi, it never will when travelling down the road.