Buy RV Potable Water Tanks for sale at the lowest prices online
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RV Fresh Water Tanks are designed for potable water use in RVs such as motorhomes, campers, trailers, food trucks, and tiny houses. These RV water tanks are manufactured by Ronco and Dura-Cast. They are made from food-grade, FDA-approved, BPA-free, rotationally-molded polyethylene that meets ANSI NSF 61 manufacturing requirements. Polyethylene potable RV water tanks offer dependability, a long service life, and great defense against cracks, rust, and corrosion.
RV tanks are manufactured across various dimensions, capacities, and thicknesses. They can serve as either a new or replacement tank for the most popular RV makes and models. Most tanks are rectangular in shape. Custom-molded tanks with unique dimensions are also available for particular recreational vehicles. Capacities of the tanks range from 1 gallon to 202 gallons. RV fresh water tanks are available with thicknesses from 0.1875 (3/16") inches to 0.3125 (5/16") inches.
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Tanks are offered with pre-installed fittings or as blank tanks with custom DIY fitting packages. For manufacturer specific tanks, browse Dura-Cast RV Fresh Water Tanks and Ronco RV Fresh Water Tanks.
turtypointbuck wrote:
Hello all,
I am on the hunt for my first TT or fiver. One thing I have found is the huge variation in holding tank sizes.
eg.
Cross Roads Sunset Trail Lite
Fresh 40
Gray 26
Black 26
Cross Roads Sunset Trail Reserve
Fresh 40
Black 40
Gray 80
Our trailer (Keystone Hideout) is similar to the Reserve and is listed at:Fresh Water 60Waste Water 38Gray Water 76What the specs don't mention is that we have 2 grey tanks, one for the sinks and one for the shower. I am looking to see how difficult it would be to plumb the two greys together because we rarely use our shower. Our grey tank for the sinks is the one that fills the quickest, then the black. When we bought the trailer, I assumed that the second grey tank was for the bathroom sink and shower. That wasn't correct; the shower has its own tank and the two sinks are plumbed into the other tank.We've never used all the fresh water, so I have stopped filling it to the brim when we dry camp. I figure that I can always add 5-10 gallons pretty easily with our water jugs if we empty the fresh water tank.My recommendation would be to get the biggest tanks you can so you don't limit where you go and how you camp. The competition for camping spots is continually increasing because far more trailers are being sold than camping spots are being built. This is going to force people to boondock or camp in non-serviced sites.My ranking for tank size importance would be:1) Sink grey tank2) Black tank3) Shower grey tank4) Fresh water tankThat ranking may look a little goofy, but we find it is easiest to both get and carry fresh water if we need more. Dealing with black and grey water is not as pleasant so we try not to do it. Also, lots of places will even have a honey pumper that will suck out your tanks if they don't have sewer.We don't carry a blue tote because between the dogs, bikes, kayaks, fishing equipment, golf clubs, chairs, etc, etc, we just don't have the room.
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