Wishing you and yours a very Merry Christmas...
From past Christmas Posts:
Wishing you and yours a very Merry Christmas...
From past Christmas Posts:
A couple of days ago, after a test fill, there was still water splashing out of the black water tank's top side.
It was time to take the tank off to see what was going on. Dammit.
First though, I removed the toilet to see what could be seen from within the VRRV:
This black fitting secures the toilet to itself and the floor of the VRRV. Interestingly, its a fitting which is readily available at Home Depot.
So I spent a delightful afternoon removing the tank from the underside of the VRRV. It required cutting the plumbing at two points (could have done it in one had I given it further thought).
I got the tank out though, minimal cursing and no blood letting aside:
There's also Eternabond tape shoring up the underside of the cracks within the tank itself. I also placed Eternabond tape on the topside as further sealing and reinforcement. Note: The JBWeld had attached and hardened rather nicely overnight.
Yesterday, Friday November 21
Started the installation of the repaired water tank at mid-morning. Things went pretty well but some minor issues were encountered.
Once the tank was in place and secured, the toilet flange's threads wouldn't reach the threads in the top of the tank! Luckily, I found an adapter at Home Depot which extended the reach of the flange enough, though instead of a threaded seal, it was now sealed with Gorilla Glue Sealant. Should be fine.
I had fortunately picked up appropriate Fernco connectors to rejoin the sections of pipe I had cut to make the removal of the holding tank easier. The flexibility of such connectors allowed me to reconnect sections with little effort. The connectors are the rubber tubes with worm gear clamps.
Today, DEC 21
After a quick leak test on the driveway at home, after putting 6 gallons in both gray and black tanks, things looked good.
I then drove the VRRV to Buckley SFB's FamCamp and did further testing for leaks while flushing both tanks. I had also gotten a water meter from Amazon and determined that I was right, they'd increased the throughput of the water faucet at the dump station! It recorded a flow of 12 gallons/Minute! No wonder there'd been water splashing out the top of the tank.
Anyways, things are good to go for now, we'll see how long things last.
Hopefully, there's no part 3 to this subject.
So there I was last week, trying to drain the black and gray water tanks on Umarang, the VRRV, a couple of cold days and nights after returning home from New Mexico.
The dumping of the tanks' contents seem to go fine. I then started pushing water in through the dump gate to flush them out and clean them out as usual.
About four minutes into the filling of the black water tank, I heard a loud clunk and water started spewing from the top of the black water tank! The forward half had come off its mounting bracket, and though the main pipe was held up by the guard I'd installed before, great pressure on the 1.5" ABS pipe from the gray water tank feeding into the dump hub broke the pipe as well.
Yep, water all over the place, luckily "clean-ish" water and not sewage!
The next day, while back at the RV storage yard, I got the tank back up flush against the bottom of the VRRV. What a PITA. I failed to see if there was a seal between the tube from the holding tank and the RV's bottom though.
I believe the forward mounting bracket had lost several of the screws used to hold it and the forward edge of the tank up. The last one failed while I was filling the tank.
Returned from New Mexico after ten fun-filled hours of uneventful driving on the I-25 Super Slab.
After the morning chill had gone, it was pleasingly warm in New Mexico the couple of times I stopped to rest or gas up the VRRV.
This changed soon after I crossed into Colorado, with heavy cloud cover blocking the sun and adding to the overall gloominess and chill on the scenery. This cloud cover wouldn't break till I got north of Colorado Springs.
It was getting dark as I pulled into my home cul-de-sac, got the trailer with Scarlett still onboard into the garage with no issues and parked the VRRV for the night.
My last view of the campsite as the sun started lighting up the eastern sky: