Dave Solberg

Diagnosing Wastewater Odor in Your RV

Dave Solberg
Duration:   1  mins

Description

If you notice a strange odor in your motor-home, it’s important to know what to do to diagnose the smell and attribute it to a specific part of the vehicle. In this RV tips demonstration, Dave Solberg teaches you how to determine whether an odor is due to an issue with the propane, grey water or black water tanks.

Dave uses some simple RV tips to solve the problem. Step one to diagnosis wastewater odor in your RV is deciding whether it might be caused by a propane leak. Propane has a very distinct, powerful smell but faint amounts can be confused with a black water or sewage tank odor. Either way, if you smell the distinctive “rotten egg” smell and are not sure, play it safe, get out of the rig and shut off the propane at the tank. Let the unit sit for a while and if the odor is gone, you should take the unit into a certified RV propane specialist to have the system inspected.

Most of the time with RV tips and techniques for maintenance it’s a game of one or the other. If you decide that the smell is not propane, you can narrow it down to either the black water or grey water tank. Even with the RV tank treatment and deodorizer products available, black water tends to have a much more potent odor than grey since it is mostly sewage. Grey water is typically shower and faucet drainage, however dumping cooking waste such as grease, milk, or other spoiled liquids down the drain can cause some rotten smells as well. Even fairly clean shower water left in a grey water tank for an extended period of time will develop a rotten smell of it’s own.

Both grey and black water tanks require a venting system that is plumbed up to the roof of the RV. This eliminates a vacuum and provides proper drainage. An annual inspection of the roof vent or vents is a an essential part of RV tips and should be done any time you experience this type of odor inside your RV. During inspection, check to make sure the vent cover is in tack, nothing is clogging the opening, and there is no gap around the vent pipe allowing air to circulate back down inside the coach.

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[Intro Music] Ff you smell wastewater inside your RV The first thing you need to do is make sure that it's not a propane leak, have it chest tested by a dealership, do a water column, test so forth and then come in and identify the different vent areas. And at any place we have a sink like this. We're going to have a drain underneath those drains have P traps in them in those P traps are supposed to have water inside of it that keeps the odors from coming back up through. That's typically going to be the gray water tank. So it's not going to be as strong of an odor.

So you want to identify that as well. This one comes back here to a vent and any place that you have a vent that opens up the system gray water and Blackwater both will have one coming up through the top that allows that to breathe. Basically opens the system so you can drain. First thing I would do is I would get up on top of the roof and check the vent, make sure the caps on it that we have no way for it to come back into the inside of it and then make sure all your vent pipes are good and solid. One last thing, check the toilet.

If it doesn't hold water in the bowl that seal's not going to hold odors from coming back up inside.

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