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OK, So we are to the plumbing system and beginning to purchase the parts. The question on the table is installation of flexible tanks for waste storage.
*caveat* we have done the reading and debating on the advisability of using a flexible tank and don't want to rehash that here. We feel that if the US military can fill them with diesel fuel and drop them from the air we can trust them with a bit of biowaste. WORST case is we have a nasty bilge cleanout. Best case is we have a reasonable sized tank in an inaccessible and currently unused area that solves our lack of any holding tank problem in a cost effective manner. We do plan on lining the space with a waterproof liner and padding to protect the tank, and securing it with tiedowns to prevent chafing.
I understand the physics behind a standard hard tank install; Line from head to tank, line from tank to pump out fitting, line from tank to vent. assorted loops etc to manage flow. The vent serves a number of functions. It allows the pumpout to proceed without creating a suction problem which would interfere with the pumpout. It allows a flow of air so the tank doesn't fill with gasses and burst. There's something about aerobic and anaerobic in there as well.
I have looked at flexible tank install instructions and there are 2 ways shown. One follows the standard set for a hard tank. The other is for a simpler setup with only a pumpout, no vent. The argument being that with a flexible tank you don't need to solve the suction issue. The tank collapses and inflates as needed. This seems to leave the build up of gas issue still to address. As I look at the 2 installations it occurs to me that for a hard tank you NEED 2 outlets to deal with the suction buildup. With a flexible tank why would you need 2? Why can't you install it with one outlet, sized for pumpout, that ALSO functions as a vent to prevent the gas buildup?
I looked around and found there are fuel deck plates that incorporate the fill and vent in the same unit. They allow for the correct 1 1/2" hose. Other than dealing with the label which would need to be changed so no numbnuts tried to pump diesel or gas into the holding tank...
Am I missing something here? Any brilliant insights?
*caveat* we have done the reading and debating on the advisability of using a flexible tank and don't want to rehash that here. We feel that if the US military can fill them with diesel fuel and drop them from the air we can trust them with a bit of biowaste. WORST case is we have a nasty bilge cleanout. Best case is we have a reasonable sized tank in an inaccessible and currently unused area that solves our lack of any holding tank problem in a cost effective manner. We do plan on lining the space with a waterproof liner and padding to protect the tank, and securing it with tiedowns to prevent chafing.
I understand the physics behind a standard hard tank install; Line from head to tank, line from tank to pump out fitting, line from tank to vent. assorted loops etc to manage flow. The vent serves a number of functions. It allows the pumpout to proceed without creating a suction problem which would interfere with the pumpout. It allows a flow of air so the tank doesn't fill with gasses and burst. There's something about aerobic and anaerobic in there as well.
I have looked at flexible tank install instructions and there are 2 ways shown. One follows the standard set for a hard tank. The other is for a simpler setup with only a pumpout, no vent. The argument being that with a flexible tank you don't need to solve the suction issue. The tank collapses and inflates as needed. This seems to leave the build up of gas issue still to address. As I look at the 2 installations it occurs to me that for a hard tank you NEED 2 outlets to deal with the suction buildup. With a flexible tank why would you need 2? Why can't you install it with one outlet, sized for pumpout, that ALSO functions as a vent to prevent the gas buildup?
I looked around and found there are fuel deck plates that incorporate the fill and vent in the same unit. They allow for the correct 1 1/2" hose. Other than dealing with the label which would need to be changed so no numbnuts tried to pump diesel or gas into the holding tank...
Am I missing something here? Any brilliant insights?