Cold Weather Plumbing
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12-09-2006, 22:40
Post: #21
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Cold Weather Plumbing
I put anti freeze- pink stuff, rock salt- 4 gallon brine mixture- nadda.
Ernie Ekberg 83PT40 Weatherford, tx [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
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12-09-2006, 22:59
Post: #22
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Cold Weather Plumbing
Chuck- we were close to zero for an extended period and then it warmed up to
the 20's. I was in Montana around the 4500 foot elevation with lots of wind, which I assume led to my freeze up. Ernie Ekberg 83PT40 Weatherford, tx [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
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12-10-2006, 00:15
Post: #23
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Cold Weather Plumbing
That the system iwas talking about all you have to do is add a
pressure switch to tell the secong pump when to run Stephen 77fc35 --- In WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com, Terry Neal > > Hi Stephen, > > How are you? Staying warm up North I hope. > > How would a recirculating pump on the hot water line (at the end) > pumping the hot water back to the water heater itself work? I'm > thinking another Groco 12 volt pump with a switch to turn it on/off when > needed. Like the ones used in residential construction so that you have > instant hot water at all faucets all the time? I think that would be a > good solution. My system needs to be usable down to -20 or -30 & on > shore power or generator. With enough insulation & keeping the water > moving, that may be the answer? > > Terry Neal > Bozeman, MT > 82PT40 > 74FC34 > > > > Stephen Birtles wrote: > > > for that to work successfully you have to have a hot return from the > > farthest faucet requires another pump but can be done succesfully and > > only works when faucet is running > > > > --- In WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com > > > > > > > > > > Ernie: > > > What about having your hot and cold water lines together,insulated > > in a blanket or something like that, and then circulate the hotwater > > throughout the hot water lines? That way you would not require the > > heat tape or forced air fans. > > > > > > Bill 84 FC 35 SB "$quanderlodge" > > > Terrace, B.C. Canada > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > ----- Original Message ---- > > > From: "erniecarpet@" > > > To: WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com > > > > > Sent: Saturday, December 9, 2006 6:04:42 AM > > > Subject: Re: [WanderlodgeForum] Cold Weather Plumbing > > > > > > Installing a bypass and injecting antifreeze in all the pipes might > > be well > > > suited to folks that do not use their coach in the winter. Since we > > live > > > further south of the deep freeze, we use ours year round. in fact, I > > guess i could > > > have considered myself a fulltimer as I was in the coach 10 months this > > > year. > > > What I was trying to get across, and hopefully I can this time. I > > would like > > > to be able to stay up in Montana longer- that is if I had a good > > system in > > > place where my water wouldn't freeze if it got to be zero outside for a > > > prolonged time. > > > Is heat tape the ONLY solution that is on the market? > > > It would be nice if there were small heaters- not noisy hair dryers > > that > > > could operate and send warm air down the side runs of the coach. > > > On my coach, the chassis heater lines do not run down the fresh > > water runs- > > > thus I couldn't use those. By the way, my chassis heaters saved our > > butts > > > driving home. > > > > > > > > > > > > Ernie Ekberg > > > 83PT40 > > > Weatherford, tx > > > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > __________________________________________________ > > > Do You Yahoo!? > > > Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around > > > http://mail.yahoo.com <http://mail.yahoo.com> > > > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] > > > > > > > > |
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12-10-2006, 01:24
Post: #24
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Cold Weather Plumbing
Have you guys really thought this out? Routing hot water from the
hotwater tank will mean the addition of new hotwater lines from two sides on the PTs and one side on the FCs as well as pumps and some way to sense the temperature to control things. How would you protect the back of the shower using this method for instance? In the PT you have actually two water branches one to the kitchen side and one to the bath. On most forward controls you have everything on one side except for those floor plans where the kitchen is on the opposite side to the bath. I never did sit down and figure out how to do it for the FC. There are two problems, first winterizing the coach for storage in the winter, and secondly using the coach in freezing weather. The first case is a little easier to solve for the PTs. Install a bypass using 3 ball valves and then injecting the antifreeze at the outside hose connection leaving the sporlan valve turned on for city water bypassing filling the water tank. Purge the water from each line and everything is protected. Winterizing the PT for freezing weather use is actually not that difficult either. As I recommended to 'Ernie installing small fans in various places to route room air into the cavities that are not open to the air and then furnishing another register for the air return appears to me to be the practical way to do this. . On my PT the underside of the body is already heavily foamed so I believe with this simple addition the pipes would be protected. tom warner vernon center,ny 1985 PT 40 At 07:15 AM 12/10/2006, you wrote: >That the system iwas talking about all you have to do is add a >pressure switch to tell the secong pump when to run >Stephen 77fc35 > > >--- In WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com, Terry Neal > > > > Hi Stephen, > > > > How are you? Staying warm up North I hope. > > > > How would a recirculating pump on the hot water line (at the end) > > pumping the hot water back to the water heater itself work? I'm > > thinking another Groco 12 volt pump with a switch to turn it on/off >when > > needed. Like the ones used in residential construction so that you >have > > instant hot water at all faucets all the time? I think that would be a > > good solution. My system needs to be usable down to -20 or -30 & on > > shore power or generator. With enough insulation & keeping the water > > moving, that may be the answer? > > > > Terry Neal > > Bozeman, MT > > 82PT40 > > 74FC34 > > > > > > > > Stephen Birtles wrote: > > > > > for that to work successfully you have to have a hot return from the > > > farthest faucet requires another pump but can be done succesfully and > > > only works when faucet is running > > > > > > --- In WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Ernie: > > > > What about having your hot and cold water lines together,insulated > > > in a blanket or something like that, and then circulate the hotwater > > > throughout the hot water lines? That way you would not require the > > > heat tape or forced air fans. > > > > > > > > Bill 84 FC 35 SB "$quanderlodge" > > > > Terrace, B.C. Canada > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > ----- Original Message ---- > > > > From: "erniecarpet@" > > > > To: WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com > > > > > > > Sent: Saturday, December 9, 2006 6:04:42 AM > > > > Subject: Re: [WanderlodgeForum] Cold Weather Plumbing > > > > > > > > Installing a bypass and injecting antifreeze in all the pipes might > > > be well > > > > suited to folks that do not use their coach in the winter. Since we > > > live > > > > further south of the deep freeze, we use ours year round. in fact, I > > > guess i could > > > > have considered myself a fulltimer as I was in the coach 10 >months this > > > > year. > > > > What I was trying to get across, and hopefully I can this time. I > > > would like > > > > to be able to stay up in Montana longer- that is if I had a good > > > system in > > > > place where my water wouldn't freeze if it got to be zero >outside for a > > > > prolonged time. > > > > Is heat tape the ONLY solution that is on the market? > > > > It would be nice if there were small heaters- not noisy hair dryers > > > that > > > > could operate and send warm air down the side runs of the coach. > > > > On my coach, the chassis heater lines do not run down the fresh > > > water runs- > > > > thus I couldn't use those. By the way, my chassis heaters saved our > > > butts > > > > driving home. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Ernie Ekberg > > > > 83PT40 > > > > Weatherford, tx > > > > > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
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12-10-2006, 02:57
Post: #25
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Cold Weather Plumbing
OK, I'll join in. Having lived in the Gunnison Valley for 16 years now and
having 2 older trailers (1959 &1969) as rental units, I can speak with some experience about winter living in dwellings not really designed for sub-zero habitation. I For my money, I'd do the heat tape and ventilation plan. Best to have a back-up if one fails. The heat tape of choice Frostex (maybe this is what BB already uses): http://www.deanbennett.com/frostex-heat-tape.htm is turned on by cold in any area of the tape, not a thermostat near the plug. It is pricey, but comes off of a roll so any length (pretty much) can be made, It will turn on even if say, it is freezing under the bed but toasty under the bathroom sink. The ventilation sounds like the deal as well. When the fans are on, the warm air will keep the water flowing and the heat tape won't run because the pipes are already warm, no call for heat will be present. The bottom line is it is far easier to deal with in the warm days of spring and summer, despite how difficult the areas are to get at, than at 10:00PM in Montana when it's -10 outside. But we already knew that. Happy Trails, Doug'nPokey Tom Warner Have you guys really thought this out? Routing hot water from the hotwater tank will mean the addition of new hotwater lines from two sides on the PTs and one side on the FCs as well as pumps and some way to sense the temperature to control things. How would you protect the back of the shower using this method for instance? In the PT you have actually two water branches one to the kitchen side and one to the bath. On most forward controls you have everything on one side except for those floor plans where the kitchen is on the opposite side to the bath. I never did sit down and figure out how to do it for the FC. There are two problems, first winterizing the coach for storage in the winter, and secondly using the coach in freezing weather. The first case is a little easier to solve for the PTs. Install a bypass using 3 ball valves and then injecting the antifreeze at the outside hose connection leaving the sporlan valve turned on for city water bypassing filling the water tank. Purge the water from each line and everything is protected. Winterizing the PT for freezing weather use is actually not that difficult either. As I recommended to 'Ernie installing small fans in various places to route room air into the cavities that are not open to the air and then furnishing another register for the air return appears to me to be the practical way to do this. . On my PT the underside of the body is already heavily foamed so I believe with this simple addition the pipes would be protected. tom warner vernon center,ny 1985 PT 40 At 07:15 AM 12/10/2006, you wrote: >That the system iwas talking about all you have to do is add a >pressure switch to tell the secong pump when to run >Stephen 77fc35 > > >--- In WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com, Terry Neal > > > > Hi Stephen, > > > > How are you? Staying warm up North I hope. > > > > How would a recirculating pump on the hot water line (at the end) > > pumping the hot water back to the water heater itself work? I'm > > thinking another Groco 12 volt pump with a switch to turn it on/off >when > > needed. Like the ones used in residential construction so that you >have > > instant hot water at all faucets all the time? I think that would be a > > good solution. My system needs to be usable down to -20 or -30 & on > > shore power or generator. With enough insulation & keeping the water > > moving, that may be the answer? > > > > Terry Neal > > Bozeman, MT > > 82PT40 > > 74FC34 > > > > > > > > Stephen Birtles wrote: > > > > > for that to work successfully you have to have a hot return from the > > > farthest faucet requires another pump but can be done succesfully and > > > only works when faucet is running > > > > > > --- In WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Ernie: > > > > What about having your hot and cold water lines together,insulated > > > in a blanket or something like that, and then circulate the hotwater > > > throughout the hot water lines? That way you would not require the > > > heat tape or forced air fans. > > > > > > > > Bill 84 FC 35 SB "$quanderlodge" > > > > Terrace, B.C. Canada > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > ----- Original Message ---- > > > > From: "erniecarpet@" > > > > To: WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com > > > > > > > Sent: Saturday, December 9, 2006 6:04:42 AM > > > > Subject: Re: [WanderlodgeForum] Cold Weather Plumbing > > > > > > > > Installing a bypass and injecting antifreeze in all the pipes might > > > be well > > > > suited to folks that do not use their coach in the winter. Since we > > > live > > > > further south of the deep freeze, we use ours year round. in fact, I > > > guess i could > > > > have considered myself a fulltimer as I was in the coach 10 >months this > > > > year. > > > > What I was trying to get across, and hopefully I can this time. I > > > would like > > > > to be able to stay up in Montana longer- that is if I had a good > > > system in > > > > place where my water wouldn't freeze if it got to be zero >outside for a > > > > prolonged time. > > > > Is heat tape the ONLY solution that is on the market? > > > > It would be nice if there were small heaters- not noisy hair dryers > > > that > > > > could operate and send warm air down the side runs of the coach. > > > > On my coach, the chassis heater lines do not run down the fresh > > > water runs- > > > > thus I couldn't use those. By the way, my chassis heaters saved our > > > butts > > > > driving home. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Ernie Ekberg > > > > 83PT40 > > > > Weatherford, tx > > > > > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] Doug Engel, Gunnison, CO. 1981 FC35SB "Pokey" --------------------------------- Everyone is raving about the all-new Yahoo! Mail beta. [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
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12-10-2006, 14:28
Post: #26
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Cold Weather Plumbing
It seems like Kathy and are in cold weather a lot and many times dry
camping. I hated to waste water getting hot water to the shower so I routed a return line from the shower back to the water heater. I then placed a relay on the pressure control switch of the primary pump to control both pumps. If the primary pump is running the recirculation pump is off. If pressure is up and the primary pump shuts off then the recirculation pump runs. When you turn the pump switch on before stepping into the shower you have instant hot water. It works well for it's intended purpose to conserve water but I don't believe that it would keep the cold water side from freezing. - Chuck Wheeler - 82 FC 31 SB Fort Worth, TX _____ From: WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com [mailto:WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Terry Neal Sent: Saturday, December 09, 2006 11:50 PM To: WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com Subject: Re: [WanderlodgeForum] Re: Cold Weather Plumbing Hi Stephen, How are you? Staying warm up North I hope. How would a recirculating pump on the hot water line (at the end) pumping the hot water back to the water heater itself work? I'm thinking another Groco 12 volt pump with a switch to turn it on/off when needed. Like the ones used in residential construction so that you have instant hot water at all faucets all the time? I think that would be a good solution. My system needs to be usable down to -20 or -30 & on shore power or generator. With enough insulation & keeping the water moving, that may be the answer? Terry Neal Bozeman, MT 82PT40 74FC34 Stephen Birtles wrote: > for that to work successfully you have to have a hot return from the > farthest faucet requires another pump but can be done succesfully and > only works when faucet is running > > --- In WanderlodgeForum@ yahoogroups.com > > > > > > Ernie: > > What about having your hot and cold water lines together,insulated > in a blanket or something like that, and then circulate the hotwater > throughout the hot water lines? That way you would not require the > heat tape or forced air fans. > > > > Bill 84 FC 35 SB "$quanderlodge" > > Terrace, B.C. Canada > > > > > > > > > > ----- Original Message ---- > > From: "erniecarpet@..." > > To: WanderlodgeForum@ yahoogroups.com > > > Sent: Saturday, December 9, 2006 6:04:42 AM > > Subject: Re: [WanderlodgeForum] Cold Weather Plumbing > > > > Installing a bypass and injecting antifreeze in all the pipes might > be well > > suited to folks that do not use their coach in the winter. Since we > live > > further south of the deep freeze, we use ours year round. in fact, I > guess i could > > have considered myself a fulltimer as I was in the coach 10 months this > > year. > > What I was trying to get across, and hopefully I can this time. I > would like > > to be able to stay up in Montana longer- that is if I had a good > system in > > place where my water wouldn't freeze if it got to be zero outside for a > > prolonged time. > > Is heat tape the ONLY solution that is on the market? > > It would be nice if there were small heaters- not noisy hair dryers > that > > could operate and send warm air down the side runs of the coach. > > On my coach, the chassis heater lines do not run down the fresh > water runs- > > thus I couldn't use those. By the way, my chassis heaters saved our > butts > > driving home. > > > > > > > > Ernie Ekberg > > 83PT40 > > Weatherford, tx > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] > > > > > > > > > > __________________________________________________ > > Do You Yahoo!? > > Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around > > http://mail. <http://mail.yahoo.com> yahoo.com <http://mail. <http://mail.yahoo.com> yahoo.com> > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
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12-10-2006, 15:13
Post: #27
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Cold Weather Plumbing
Thanks Chuck for your experience & help. Sounds like a good plan & if I
can get some heat into those runs with a fan, then I think that should work. May wind up adding a small diesel fired heater with heat exchanger to circulate everything & add heat to the interior of the coach through the existing engine fed heaters. Terry Neal Bozeman, MT 82PT40 74FC34 Chuck Wheeler wrote: > It seems like Kathy and are in cold weather a lot and many times dry > camping. I hated to waste water getting hot water to the shower so I > routed > a return line from the shower back to the water heater. I then placed a > relay on the pressure control switch of the primary pump to control both > pumps. If the primary pump is running the recirculation pump is off. If > pressure is up and the primary pump shuts off then the recirculation pump > runs. When you turn the pump switch on before stepping into the shower you > have instant hot water. It works well for it's intended purpose to > conserve > water but I don't believe that it would keep the cold water side from > freezing. > > - Chuck Wheeler - > 82 FC 31 SB > Fort Worth, TX > > > _____ > > From: WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com > > [mailto:WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com > > Sent: Saturday, December 09, 2006 11:50 PM > To: WanderlodgeForum@yahoogroups.com > > Subject: Re: [WanderlodgeForum] Re: Cold Weather Plumbing > > Hi Stephen, > > How are you? Staying warm up North I hope. > > How would a recirculating pump on the hot water line (at the end) > pumping the hot water back to the water heater itself work? I'm > thinking another Groco 12 volt pump with a switch to turn it on/off when > needed. Like the ones used in residential construction so that you have > instant hot water at all faucets all the time? I think that would be a > good solution. My system needs to be usable down to -20 or -30 & on > shore power or generator. With enough insulation & keeping the water > moving, that may be the answer? > > Terry Neal > Bozeman, MT > 82PT40 > 74FC34 > > Stephen Birtles wrote: > > > for that to work successfully you have to have a hot return from the > > farthest faucet requires another pump but can be done succesfully and > > only works when faucet is running > > > > --- In WanderlodgeForum@ > yahoogroups.com > > > > > > > > > > Ernie: > > > What about having your hot and cold water lines together,insulated > > in a blanket or something like that, and then circulate the hotwater > > throughout the hot water lines? That way you would not require the > > heat tape or forced air fans. > > > > > > Bill 84 FC 35 SB "$quanderlodge" > > > Terrace, B.C. Canada > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > ----- Original Message ---- > > > From: "erniecarpet@..." > > > To: WanderlodgeForum@ > yahoogroups.com > > > > > Sent: Saturday, December 9, 2006 6:04:42 AM > > > Subject: Re: [WanderlodgeForum] Cold Weather Plumbing > > > > > > Installing a bypass and injecting antifreeze in all the pipes might > > be well > > > suited to folks that do not use their coach in the winter. Since we > > live > > > further south of the deep freeze, we use ours year round. in fact, I > > guess i could > > > have considered myself a fulltimer as I was in the coach 10 months > this > > > year. > > > What I was trying to get across, and hopefully I can this time. I > > would like > > > to be able to stay up in Montana longer- that is if I had a good > > system in > > > place where my water wouldn't freeze if it got to be zero outside > for a > > > prolonged time. > > > Is heat tape the ONLY solution that is on the market? > > > It would be nice if there were small heaters- not noisy hair dryers > > that > > > could operate and send warm air down the side runs of the coach. > > > On my coach, the chassis heater lines do not run down the fresh > > water runs- > > > thus I couldn't use those. By the way, my chassis heaters saved our > > butts > > > driving home. > > > > > > > > > > > > Ernie Ekberg > > > 83PT40 > > > Weatherford, tx > > > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > __________________________________________________ > > > Do You Yahoo!? > > > Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around > > > http://mail. <http://mail.yahoo.com <http://mail.yahoo.com>> > yahoo.com <http://mail. > <http://mail.yahoo.com <http://mail.yahoo.com>> yahoo.com> > > > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] > > > > > > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] > > |
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