โOct-23-2019 10:52 AM
โOct-24-2019 12:25 PM
Kayteg1 wrote:
The 12V pump setup is very basic, so there in not much to it and you can buy the cheap pump for about $40.
Planning the trailer, put fresh water tank in front of trailer axle, as that will be filled up most of the time.
When you put gray water behind the axle - You can always drain it, if you notice lack of trailer statibization.
โOct-24-2019 12:24 PM
DutchmenSport wrote:nc_beagle wrote:
... The tank I am looking at says not to use electric pumps. ...
Is the tank you are looking at pressurized? If so, that warning is to prevent an electric (air) pump from pressuring the tank and perhaps, over-pressurizing and blowing it out.
Electric water pumps for RV are just that. They "Pump" the water out of the tank, not pressurize them. Pressurized tanks will then pump their own water, until the pressure drops and then the pump will add air again to pump up the pressure. My parents travel trailer in 1963 worked like this, except the tank was galvanized steel.
Water pumps suck the water out of the tank via a hole at the top of the tank and tube that runs to the bottom of the tank. AND they must be vented, which means there is a second hole for displaced water to be replaced with air. Otherwise, they will form a vacuum and nothing will pump ... well, they might collapse inward with opposite pressure.
So, what type of tank are you looking at. If it says no electric pumps, it's pretty hard to blow out a pressurized tank with a bicycle pump. If its a vented tank, then any RV pump (like the one drawn out in the link above) will work for you. You can get an RV pump that runs on 12 volt battery from anywhere from about $50 to a million dollars if you want. FYI, RV pumps often have a way of adjusting the OUTBOUND water pressure where the pump turns on and off, keeping your water lines pressurized, but NOT the tank.
Also, your tank should have a way to drain it. RV tanks have an outlet on the bottom, attached to a tube running under them, and at the end an open-closed water valve. You open the valve to drain the tank (most important in the winter in snow states).
Hope this helps.
Edit:
Here's a photo of my 35 gallon tank I purchased from TSC (Tractor Supply Company). The pump is an electric water transfer pump which works great for filling my fresh water tank in the camper (both gravity fill on my previous travel trailer, and my current 5er that requires a garden hose attached under pressure.
The only problem is, the pump pumps water OUT of the tank faster than air can be replaced, causing a vacuum even though there is a check-valve (inlet) vent in the middle of the black cap-lid. When the pump runs, the air inlet is not sufficient (it's too small). It wasn't intended to be used with a an electric pump. To get around this, I simply loosen the back lid, or remove it completely when pumping water from the tank with the electric water pump:
โOct-24-2019 12:08 PM
โOct-24-2019 11:56 AM
โOct-24-2019 07:03 AM
โOct-23-2019 05:20 PM
nc_beagle wrote:
... The tank I am looking at says not to use electric pumps. ...
โOct-23-2019 12:10 PM
โOct-23-2019 11:48 AM
โOct-23-2019 11:42 AM
โOct-23-2019 11:27 AM
โOct-23-2019 11:15 AM
Boon Docker wrote:
Install one of these at the outlet of your fresh water tank.
โOct-23-2019 11:00 AM