generator/rv questions
generator/rv questions
hello beautiful people. i will be coming to bm this year with a travel trailer. my question is do most people bring a back up generator? i heard that the dust can sometimes clog it up and its good to bring a back up. and also, whats a good thing to do with grey water? 
- EB
- Posts: 492
- Joined: Wed Jul 14, 2004 3:36 pm
- Burning Since: 2000
- Camp Name: Camp Obelix (2:45 & A)
- Contact:
Generator -- most people do not bring a generator. But you're free to bring one. If it's a loud one please take some time to build a baffle. This will score you points with your neighbors. I've run mine in severe dust storms and it's been fine just be sure to clean it up when you get home.
Grey water -- You can either pack it out or you can build an evaporation pond (black plastic staked and curbed at the corners) to dry it up. There's a sticky thread above showing some of the work put into such ventures.
RV black water tanks -- these can be pumped out by roving, unpredictable RV pumping trucks. Usually about $75 cash money.
Grey water -- You can either pack it out or you can build an evaporation pond (black plastic staked and curbed at the corners) to dry it up. There's a sticky thread above showing some of the work put into such ventures.
RV black water tanks -- these can be pumped out by roving, unpredictable RV pumping trucks. Usually about $75 cash money.
Irony. You're soaking in it.
yeah. i would NOT let it leak or just dump it. i know better than that for sure. im a first timer for bm but i have been to a lot of regionals. i know the rules and plan on sticking to them. im just trying to gather as much info from you wonderful people before i get out there so i do this thing right the first time. thanks everyone for your input. if anyone has more tips or advise, keep it coming! thanks! god, i cant wait for my first big burn. its been 10 years in the making! 
They make a cap for your RV drain system that fits a standard garden hose. Last year I ran this into the evap pool setup mentioned above and it neatly took care of all of my grey water. I brought a 55Gal drum of water with me and took nice hot showers every afternoon:) I had enough to spare that I occasionally gifted showers and water to others towards the end of the week.
I did need the genny to charge the batteries on the TT regularly. I couldn't quite make it 48 hours without the voltage dropping too low and the fridge shutting down. I only needed to run it a few hours in the afternoon and that did the trick. A much better muffler and baffling arrangement are on the project plans for this month. No dust problems... change your oil and clean your air filter as soon as you get home.
Save your black water tank for emergencies and night time use. The pump trucks are hard to find and they only come by so often. They don't take appointments and you have to really try to catch them as they pass you.
I did need the genny to charge the batteries on the TT regularly. I couldn't quite make it 48 hours without the voltage dropping too low and the fridge shutting down. I only needed to run it a few hours in the afternoon and that did the trick. A much better muffler and baffling arrangement are on the project plans for this month. No dust problems... change your oil and clean your air filter as soon as you get home.
Save your black water tank for emergencies and night time use. The pump trucks are hard to find and they only come by so often. They don't take appointments and you have to really try to catch them as they pass you.
- Sail Man
- Posts: 4523
- Joined: Tue Sep 30, 2008 10:03 am
- Burning Since: 2008
- Camp Name: Kidsville: Delicious
- Location: 20 Minutes into the Future
I also plan on buying a new gennie for the new rv but i am having chest pains over the price of the honda's which i do prefer. Any opinions on Generac's?
Excuse me Ma'am, your going to feel a small prick.
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Algorithms never survive the first thirty seconds of patient contact
- The Drifter
- Posts: 93
- Joined: Sun Jun 28, 2009 9:48 am
- Contact:
If you have a builtin generator in your trailor, which is rare for anything other than a toy hauler, use that genny. It is likely a relatively quiet unit made by Onan. These are great little gennies.
Read the manual and find the high-altitude switch. Use it since we are at ~ 4K on the Playa. This is the most common source of failure for builtin gennies out there. A simple switch.
If your built inworks OK there is no need for hauling a spare.
Read the manual and find the high-altitude switch. Use it since we are at ~ 4K on the Playa. This is the most common source of failure for builtin gennies out there. A simple switch.
If your built inworks OK there is no need for hauling a spare.
The Generac is as loud and annoying as the Coleman. Please just say no to those.Sail Man wrote:I also plan on buying a new gennie for the new rv but i am having chest pains over the price of the honda's which i do prefer. Any opinions on Generac's?
The Hondas are a financial sacrifice that is worth every penny.
Trust me, I have three Hondas. Yes it was painfull on the pocket book but sooooooooo worth it.
[quote="The Drifter"]The evaporation pond idea usually doesn't work very well. Become one with the dirt......[/quote]
I have heard mixed things on this subject. Mine was 8'x10' and I evaporated 60 ish gallons of water over a 5 day period, even with dust storms, etc. You have to remember to shut off the valve for the last day or two so the last remaining water can evap out. Do remember to place it in an area that won't be shaded and receives a maximum amount of sunlight.
I have heard mixed things on this subject. Mine was 8'x10' and I evaporated 60 ish gallons of water over a 5 day period, even with dust storms, etc. You have to remember to shut off the valve for the last day or two so the last remaining water can evap out. Do remember to place it in an area that won't be shaded and receives a maximum amount of sunlight.
- Captain Goddammit
- Posts: 8589
- Joined: Sat Sep 06, 2003 9:34 am
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- Camp Name: First Camp
- Location: Seattle, WA
I also have three Hondas, after having owned all sorts of others. They're worth it, and I'm not loaded with cash.
Here's my water system: I haul extra water in plastic barrels, 30-gallon size because they are a lot more manageable when full than 55s. I usually bring about 100 gallons of water.
I bring one extra empty barrel.
When the camper tank is empty, I use an electric pump to reload from one of the full barrels, and I use a 5-gallon bucket and funnel to transfer grey water from the camper to that extra empty barrel.
As each of my fresh water barrels becomes empty, it serves as the next grey water barrel.
No screwing around with evap ponds, and I don't leave anything on the desert.
At the nearest rest stop with an RV dump station I just pour out all the grey water.
crstophr: do you run your fridge on electric?? Virtually all RV fridges will operate on propane, and work much better that way. Most will operate in the absolute absence of power.
Here's my water system: I haul extra water in plastic barrels, 30-gallon size because they are a lot more manageable when full than 55s. I usually bring about 100 gallons of water.
I bring one extra empty barrel.
When the camper tank is empty, I use an electric pump to reload from one of the full barrels, and I use a 5-gallon bucket and funnel to transfer grey water from the camper to that extra empty barrel.
As each of my fresh water barrels becomes empty, it serves as the next grey water barrel.
No screwing around with evap ponds, and I don't leave anything on the desert.
At the nearest rest stop with an RV dump station I just pour out all the grey water.
crstophr: do you run your fridge on electric?? Virtually all RV fridges will operate on propane, and work much better that way. Most will operate in the absolute absence of power.
GreyCoyote: "At this rate it wont be long before he is Admiral Fukkit."
- Sail Man
- Posts: 4523
- Joined: Tue Sep 30, 2008 10:03 am
- Burning Since: 2008
- Camp Name: Kidsville: Delicious
- Location: 20 Minutes into the Future
Not to mention a nice little packageToken wrote:The Generac is as loud and annoying as the Coleman. Please just say no to those.Sail Man wrote:I also plan on buying a new gennie for the new rv but i am having chest pains over the price of the honda's which i do prefer. Any opinions on Generac's?
The Hondas are a financial sacrifice that is worth every penny.
Trust me, I have three Hondas. Yes it was painfull on the pocket book but sooooooooo worth it.
Excuse me Ma'am, your going to feel a small prick.
_______________________________________
Algorithms never survive the first thirty seconds of patient contact
_______________________________________
Algorithms never survive the first thirty seconds of patient contact