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Re: Toilets

PostPosted: Wed Dec 26, 2012 3:58 pm
by Lgboro
You might look at composting toilets - they are really pricy but I have seen a couple of instructional articles on how to make a homemade one. Try Google.

The commercial ones start at over $900 but all but a handful say they really work good without the odors of other self contained units.

Re: Toilets

PostPosted: Wed Dec 26, 2012 4:55 pm
by droid_ca
My thoughts are to build a sawdust toilet as I don't want to be worrying about a black water tank when it starts to get below freezing

Re: Toilets

PostPosted: Thu Dec 27, 2012 9:10 am
by H.A.
...

Re: Toilets

PostPosted: Sun Dec 30, 2012 11:26 am
by droid_ca
I wouldn't want one in a small trailer as that might be disturbing but in a tent outside while boondocking I can see...I just doing want to have people doing there buisness in my drinking water seems kinda gross

Re: Toilets

PostPosted: Sun Dec 30, 2012 4:11 pm
by Wobbly Wheels
Heated outhouses, flush toilets, showers?? You call this camping


Exactly what I was thinking... :lol:

Re: Toilets

PostPosted: Thu Jan 10, 2013 6:42 am
by rowerwet
the short walk to the camp bathhouse is nothing during the day, at 2 AM my wife wants something next door

Re: Toilets

PostPosted: Thu Jan 10, 2013 12:44 pm
by droid_ca
I have started building my sawdust toilet if there are facilities available then I'd use them but for some of the places I like to go you'd be lucky to get a radio signal...I'll try and post pictures of it when finished

Re: Toilets

PostPosted: Thu Jan 10, 2013 1:36 pm
by bobhenry
Will that be a gravity flush or are you gonna use a grain auger to "pump" the dust.

:rofl: :rofl2: :rofl:

Re: Toilets

PostPosted: Thu Jan 10, 2013 1:44 pm
by droid_ca
bobhenry wrote:Will that be a gravity flush or are you gonna use a grain auger to "pump" the dust.

:rofl: :rofl2: :rofl:


Hahahaha I was thinking of a
Image

Re: Toilets

PostPosted: Thu Jan 10, 2013 2:18 pm
by Bogo
bobhenry wrote:Will that be a gravity flush or are you gonna use a grain auger to "pump" the dust.

:rofl: :rofl2: :rofl:

Don't laugh. I saw a writeup on a composting restroom that used a multiple auger type setup to move the waste along a tube. It only moved it a few feet along each day, and by the time it reached the end it was fully composted. It was made to handle the waste from a few hundred people.

Re: Toilets

PostPosted: Thu Jan 10, 2013 5:54 pm
by Wobbly Wheels
biziedizie wrote: Dung chucking is fun! Get the right angle, drink a few beers and it's an afternoon of entertaintment :lol:


One question: is the point of impact still called the 'splash' ?

Eewwwwww..... :lol:

Re: Toilets

PostPosted: Fri Jan 11, 2013 1:27 am
by Bogo
:cry: :cry: :cry:
I was looking up parts sizes and found out the remote cassette vacuum generator and holding tank (Dometic VT2510) I was wanting to use was discontinued.
:cry: :cry: :cry:
Most standard vacuum generators are larger than that small compact vacuum generator and holding tank were. Then on top of the vacuum generator you still need a black water holding tank. What was really nice about the VT2500 is the 3.5 gallon holding tank/vacuum tank was removable, and you could carry it to any toilet and pour it in. You didn't need to move the RV or trailer. A good vacuum flush system uses from .4 liter to 1 liter per flush so they use very little water. They also are very good at cleaning out the bowl when flushed. The drawbacks are you can't use heavy quilted toilet paper like Charmin, regular TP works fine, you need a pressurized water system, more parts and tech to break down, and cost. The loss of the VT2510 makes it real hard to fit one on a tiny travel trailer. The volume goes up from 1.6 cubic feet of basement space to around 4 cubic feet with a small holding tank.

This PDF from Dometic goes over what a vacuum flush system is, it's components, etc..
http://www.dometic.com/FileOrganizer/1-international/Operation%20&%20Installation%20Manuals/Toilets/VacuFlush.pdf

Bogo wrote:After using vacuum flush toilets on both boats and RVs, I'm seriously looking at spending the dough on a remote cassette type one. I'll put it's remote vacuum tank in a heated locker in the basement. To use them you do need a pressurized water system, and 12VDC at a couple amps for a few minutes per flush.

Re: Toilets

PostPosted: Tue Jan 15, 2013 11:17 am
by droid_ca
I'm thinking I'll be using clumping kitty litter in a plastic bag and throw it away with the trash...after all we chuck out diapers and what not so there should be no problem

Re: Toilets

PostPosted: Tue Jan 15, 2013 1:55 pm
by droid_ca
biziedizie wrote:Will you be using the new and improved fresh scent :awesome: :poop:


I'm thinking so and if times get tuff I might just have to get a scoop and sort it out...ok ok just kidding about the last bit but I think I'll manage...I did have an idea about vermiculture though just not sure if they would survive on it just to help decomposition a little faster

Re: Toilets

PostPosted: Tue Jan 15, 2013 2:20 pm
by Wobbly Wheels
The "Mark I Poopenthrone" worked great with odor-control kitchen trash bags. You tie up the bag when you're done and throw it into the next bag, which gets tied up and thrown into the next bag...it controlled odors and mess, didn't generate a pile of used bags somewhere, limited the amount that could spill if a bag got torn, and 'emptying' was still as easy as tossing a single bag into a dumpster on the way home.

Had I continued using it, I would have added kitty litter to the bag. I only used it once before the missus decided she don't camp (that's one of the reasons for the trailer I'm building:)

Bogo - if you want to check out the Sealand vac flush stuff, I can check with my wholesaler on parts and availability.
Unless you're in Canada I can't help you with price, though I can provide the (CDN) MSRP. They make low-pro tanks with the reservoir & pump assy attached. They are a decent system but, like anything else, they have their drawbacks too.