Forum Discussion
Gdetrailer
Mar 22, 2018Explorer III
proxim2020 wrote:
Vegetable oil works just fine. I've been doing vegetable oil over the seal for years in trailers. Even after sitting for months I've never came back to something that looks like gear oil. The oil does go rancid, but I don't don't plan on cooking with it. After months of sitting you get a bit of a rancid smell if you stick your nose in the bowl, but the odor isn't strong enough to foul up the rest of the trailer.
Never said it would look like "gear oil".
However, when vegy oil breaks down over time it LEAVES A STICKY RESIDUE behind on any surface it touched.
While YOU may think that is fine and good, it WILL build up and eventually can cause the blade to stick and dislodge the seal, or cause other "stuff" to stick and not clear the seal..
Use oils at your own risk, it won't be me needing to replace parts on my toilet..
If you don't understand the issue with vegy oils, then perhaps you need to go check out what happens at restaurants that use friers.. Granted, the oil there gets airborn via heat but every surface that the airborn oil lands on gets a coating of near impossible to remove greasy build up.. Takes a lot of hard work to cleanup vegy oils residue..
Imagine scrubbing that greasy build up out of your toilet blade and seal (yuck)!!!
I can't figure out why it is so "important" to put ANYTHING in the toilet bowl while not in use or in storage..
I have been allowing mine to dryout over the last 18 yrs and those toilets have NEVER developed leaking issues with the seals.
The RV toilet manufacturers SHIP the toilets with no liquids, those toilets sit for long periods of time in warehouses which often are not climate controlled before being installed in a RV..
Trailer manufacturers ship the trailers with the toilet bowl empty and these trailers often sit on dealers lots for months to even a year or so with EMPTY BOWLS..
RV toilets are not the same as home toilets, the blade/seal take place of the "trap" in a home toilet..
Home toilets MUST have water in the bowl in order to fill the trap and prevent sewer gasses from getting into the home..
RV toilets, no water needed for a trap.
Do yourself a favor, just leave the bowl empty when storing..
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