Dutch_12078

Winters south, summers north

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way2roll wrote: Following this conversation as we stay in a lot of state parks. Question - where do you put the tote when not using it? In a bin?
Here's where carry our 27 gallon tote. It's hard to see, but I use a small block and tackle to raise and lower the tank from the supports.
Dutch
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swimmer_spe

Sudbury, Ontario, Canada

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wildtoad wrote: swimmer_spe wrote: corvettekent wrote: I think that you need to look at this another way. You did not say how many people will be staying in your RV for one week, so I will use my 5th wheel as an example. I have a 45 gallon black tank and it takes two of us 20 days to fill it. That's 1.125 gallons per person per day. So, after one week of camping, we would only have 15.75 gallons in our black tank.
After a w0eekend of regular usage, our tanks get about 1/4-1/2 full. Our largest tank is 38 gallons. So, I want to be able to dump it as needed and not have to not use the facilities we have.
Having a tote allows us to use water more freely, and avoid the “you’re using too much water” conversations.
Now back to tote size. Yes you can pull the tote with your truck once you get it to the truck. I’ve found even my smaller 25 gallon tote a bear to pull on uneven ground that I find at many CG’s especially state parks. If I need to I’ll make a couple of trips, but most of our stays using it once will provide enough room in the black tank to finish the stay. Gray may need multiple if I chose not to use the CG facilities for shower, or the lake.
I have an atv, and getting the truck or atv to where the dump valves on the RV is won't be the issue. My issues is that I want to ensure that once I dump the tank, it is empty. For the black, I want to know that once it is dumped, that the flush will get as much out as possible.
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swimmer_spe

Sudbury, Ontario, Canada

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way2roll wrote: Following this conversation as we stay in a lot of state parks. Question - where do you put the tote when not using it? In a bin?
While set up, it would just stay near the outlet, maybe even under the RV if there will be room.
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swimmer_spe

Sudbury, Ontario, Canada

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Grit dog wrote: time2roll wrote: Conserve water and skip the tote. Is there a shower house and restroom? Use it when you can.
Well that may be an option albeit wholly opposite of the OPs apparent intention to use his camper for those “duties.”
swimmer, another option if you’re not planning on regular use, see if there’s a local turd burglar that services the campground. Might be cheaper and hitting the easy button to just have it pumped out mid week.
Reality is, this will become a more common issue the more we camp. We bought this new RV to camp more. We do not usually stay at places that have full hook ups. Many only have electricity on site. I can transfer water no issue. It is the grey and black water that becomes an issue.
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swimmer_spe

Sudbury, Ontario, Canada

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Dutch_12078 wrote: way2roll wrote: Following this conversation as we stay in a lot of state parks. Question - where do you put the tote when not using it? In a bin?
Here's where carry our 27 gallon tote. It's hard to see, but I use a small block and tackle to raise and lower the tank from the supports.
![[image]](https://i.imgur.com/d09wzmbl.jpg)
That is very common. I have a toy hauler, so that may complicate things.
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JRscooby

Indepmo

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Silly question.
If it is hard to find/carry/store a tank large enough to hold the whole capacity of black tank, why not get a smaller tank, dump when on-board is half full?
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willald

NC

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I have the Barker 42 gallon tote tank being discussed here. We bring it whenever we know we will be camping without a sewer hookup, which is usually 1 or 2 trips a year.
It will work perfectly for what you want to do. Main downside to it is, like already said, finding a place to store it when on the road, and when not using it.
I wrap ours in a large black trash bag and put it in the back of the Jeep we tow. It fits, but barely. Still trying to find a better way to store it. One day we may try mounting it to the rear ladder like was shown on here a few posts ago, just not sure if I can bring myself to trust the ladder for carrying something like that when on the road.
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mowermech

Billings, MT

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Many years ago I bought a 15 gallon tote thinking it would be great to have. Then, I realized that our camping at the time always meant we were at an RV park with full hookups or at a Federal or State campground where there was no dump station. So, the tote stayed under a work bench in the shop gathering dust for several years until I sold it in a garage sale for $15.
These days, as a "Senior Citizen" (80+) all of our travel in the RV is almost always to full hookup RV parks, except for two Ham Radio trips per year. For those, I can dump on the way home.
My point being, before investing in one of those things, give due consideration to the logistics of it. Will you actually have a use for it? Some folks do, but I sure didn't!
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time2roll

Southern California

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I did the tote for five years with my pop-up. Tote was the holding tank. My black is only 24 gal in the trailer and it will go 7-10 days with the three of us using the camp facilities when convenient. I would sooner move the entire trailer to the dump vs haul the tote around and make periodic trips to empty it. Very happy to let the tote go when the pop-up was sold.
If the tote works for you then great. Not for me.
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swimmer_spe

Sudbury, Ontario, Canada

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willald wrote: I have the Barker 42 gallon tote tank being discussed here. We bring it whenever we know we will be camping without a sewer hookup, which is usually 1 or 2 trips a year.
It will work perfectly for what you want to do. Main downside to it is, like already said, finding a place to store it when on the road, and when not using it.
I wrap ours in a large black trash bag and put it in the back of the Jeep we tow. It fits, but barely. Still trying to find a better way to store it. One day we may try mounting it to the rear ladder like was shown on here a few posts ago, just not sure if I can bring myself to trust the ladder for carrying something like that when on the road.
My TV is a full size truck, so worse case, into the back of the truck it can go.
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