cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

Another heated water hose question

Diamond_c
Nomad
Nomad
Ok this question isn’t as much about the hose as what do you do to keep the filter from freezing? We are thinking of going camping the first weekend in march in north west Tennessee.the average temperature there that time of year is 30 at night and mid to upper 40’s during the day. WhAts ya’lls thoughts?
11 REPLIES 11

garyp4951
Explorer III
Explorer III
Most campgrounds have it in writing that you must disconnect the water hose in below freezing temps, or you will be responsible for the repairs to their hydrant.

TXiceman
Explorer
Explorer
ronharmless wrote:
Diamond c wrote:
… I really don’t think it will be cold enough long enough to be a problem ,but around here it’s hard to tell this far out.
what if it went down to 20 at night with a high of 30 during the day, for a week? That’s certainly possible.


We simply fill the freshwater tank, drain the waste tanks and store the water and sewer hoses. If I need to refill the water or drain a waste tank, I get out the required hosed and after use, store them again.

And yes, the stinky slinky can freeze and then you do have a mess to deal with.

Ken
Amateur Radio Operator.
2023 Cougar 22MLS, toted with a 2022, F150, 3.5L EcoBoost, Crewcab, Max Tow, FORMER Full Time RVer. Travel with a standard schnauzer and a Timneh African Gray parrot

ronharmless
Explorer
Explorer
Diamond c wrote:
… I really don’t think it will be cold enough long enough to be a problem ,but around here it’s hard to tell this far out.
what if it went down to 20 at night with a high of 30 during the day, for a week? That’s certainly possible.

JRscooby
Explorer II
Explorer II
Does everybody understand how a freeze-proof hydrant works? The valve is below frost line. When you shut water off flow stops, but also opens ports to allow water in pipe to drain into a gravel bed, then out into soil.
If a hose is hooked up the stand-pipe may not drain. For your convince of not using tank you might need to replace the filter. But the owner of CG may need to dig up, and replace the hydrant.

Diamond_c
Nomad
Nomad
No there is no reason not to use the holding tank,just never have. I was thinking of using heat tape on the spigot pipe coming up out of the ground and continuing on to the filter. I really don’t think it will be cold enough long enough to be a problem ,but around here it’s hard to tell this far out.

MFL
Nomad II
Nomad II
enblethen wrote:
I would put water in holding tank for night use. After weather warms up during the day use city water connection. Disconnect hose and filter and put inside for night.


This is the obvious solution.

OP...is there a reason you cannot use your fresh tank?

Jerry

LMHS
Explorer II
Explorer II
This is how I did my (outside) water filters when we lived in an RV thru a few TN winters (Chattanooga & Elizabethton with single digit temps) as well as NM winters (negative temps).Or as long as the electric is on.

I put my two water filters (a spin down sediment filter plus a standard 2"x10" filter housing) inside a 5 gallon bucket and used two water hoses:

First, I built two heated water hoses from a single long potable water safe garden hose (garden hoses have thicker walls than the crappy RV drinking water hoses and can handle the heat from heat tape for years). The hoses were cut into shorter lengths and had plastic hose mender/quick connects on each of the ends.

I used two (residential) heat tapes that were a few feet longer than the cut hoses. Each hose had heat tape that extended at least 18" past each end of the hose. The heat tape was secured to the garden hose with electrical tape every foot in a straight line (do not spiral wrap) to hold it in place.

Then I insulated each of the hoses with (residential) foam pipe insulation (needs to be the next pipe size up from the garden hose outside diameter). The foam pipe insulation is wrapped with black Gorilla Tape to protect the insulation and keep it closed.
This is really a two person job and requires the hose to be laid out on the ground in a straight line. Wrapping it is a PITA. Luckily the tape doesn't have to be one single continuous piece but does need to overlap by at least 1/4 of the tape's width.

I used a hole saw to cut the holes needed to thread the water hose (plus insulation) into the bucket. Hole position is determined by the water filter configuration. Because I used two filters connected in a "U" shape, both in in and out water hoses were on the same side of the bucket. Some 1/4" holes are drilled into the bottom of the bucket to allow any water leakage to drain out.Then a piece of reflectix is cut to lay in the bottom of the bucket. A piece is cut to wrap around the interior sides of the bucket. The holes for the water hoses is cut thru the reflectix.

Both hoses attach to the filters with plastic quick connects. Plastic doesn't freeze as fast as metal does. The 18" excess on the non-plug end on each of the hoses gets wrapped around each of the filters (just laid loosely, no need to tape it down or wrap tightly - the reflectix will keep the heat in).

The plug end on the camper side gets plugged into an electrical outlet near the "city" water connection. The thermometer disc is NOT secured to the hose or anything else. It will sense ambient temps. The extra 18" of heat tape is used to wrap around the "city" water connection before insulating it with some reflectix.

On the park's pipe stand, the excess 18" gets wrapped around the hose bibb and plugged into the nearby(?) power post (in the 15/20 amp duplex outlet). If you need to use an extension cord, use one of the thick heavy duty short cords and make sure the connection is waterproofed.

I make an "envelope" from reflectix that is big enough to fit over the pipe stand and reach all the way to the ground even after the envelope is tied onto the pipe stand so it is closed at the ground level. I do not use tape for this, I use bungie cords, rope or old ratchet straps. The envelope needs to be removable but not blow off in a winter storm. It might be a good idea to use a screw-in-the-ground dog tie-out and attach the bucket to the tie-out so the winter winds don't blow it away.

enblethen
Nomad
Nomad
I would put water in holding tank for night use. After weather warms up during the day use city water connection. Disconnect hose and filter and put inside for night.

Bud
USAF Retired
Pace Arrow


2003 Chev Ice Road Tracker

Coach-man
Explorer
Explorer
When you put the filter outside on the pedestal side, you risk freezing. While I believe that the weather in Tennessee would not be a problem if it were colder I would be worried. Any reason to put it there? I don;t think it matters which end of the hose you put it as long as the water goes thru the filter before it goes in to the trailer!

Diamond_c
Nomad
Nomad
I have always put the filter on the water spigot after the pressure regulator.

Coach-man
Explorer
Explorer
At what end of the hose is the filter? I put mine at the inside connection, not at the pedestal. We winter camped in NJ & Pennsylvania with highs in the 30’s and down to 15 at night with no problem.