bobhenry wrote:...
For my teardrop I continue to toy with the idea of 2 lengths of schedule 80 pvc for the tanks themselves they would be able to be pressurized. They can be mounted under the body and disperse the weight evenly.
18" of 4" pvc is a gallon so 2 9' sections should give a 12 gallon capacity. All fittings are readily available at any good plumbing supply house to plumb it for air or either 12 volt or 120 volt pump.
As the water is used, the pressurized air expands and loses pressure. If the tank volume is nearly full when pressurized, there will be much more water volume than air volume, so the air will need to expand by a factor of many times to push out all of the water, by which point it will have no useful pressure unless it started far too high for the tanks.
If compressed air power is really desired for the plumbing, perhaps a more workable arrangement would use a portable air tank, pressurized as high as it can go (normal shop air pressures of 100 psi or more), and connected to the water tank through a regulator set to a reasonable working level for the water. This would carry more air, and thus pump more water, without taking a huge amount of extra water tank space or requiring the water tanks to run at excessive pressure. If the air tank is kept removable, it could be taken for a refill at a service station tire pump if the water tanks are refilled on the trip, away from the original source of compressed air.