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Post by 1990grunt on Jun 8, 2020 16:10:43 GMT -5
I recently purchased a 2013 Durango 358BHK. The dealer I bought it from couldn't tell me how many black and grey tanks there were. The manual says there is 2 black and 2 grey, but they think there is only 3. Any help?
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Post by Edd505 on Jun 8, 2020 21:57:15 GMT -5
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Post by 1990grunt on Jun 9, 2020 7:03:18 GMT -5
Thanks for the link. I saw this and it says there are 2 black tanks and 2 grey tanks. Yet, the dealer told me there were only three total tanks. One black for the main bathroom, one grey for the shower in the main bathroom, and one tank for the 2nd half bath, which they say is a black/grey combined. There are three levers for emptying, which is why it makes sense there are three tanks. But, why do the specs say four?
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Post by Edd505 on Jun 9, 2020 19:02:37 GMT -5
could have two tanks connected. I had 3 tanks, 3 valves and two outlets, now 3/3/& 1.
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Post by Edd505 on Jun 9, 2020 19:14:11 GMT -5
could have two tanks connected. I had 3 tanks, 3 valves and two outlets, now 3/3/& 1.
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Post by Chuck on Jun 14, 2020 12:24:45 GMT -5
1990grunt Try this, put food coloring in say the sink, run some water an check to see where it come out by pulling one of the dump handles ... Do this for each drain changing food coloring in your trailer including your toilet ... Once you have established which drains are connected to which handle then I would go back an use on food coloring for your black tank an start over by adding the same food coloring to each drain an leaving the black tank closed but pulling the other handles see if you get the same coloring ... This is a process of elimination an it may take awhile but sooner or later you will see where your drains empty into an what valves empty what an how many tanks you have Good Luck an lets us know so other may benefit from you testing Chuck
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Post by 1990grunt on Jun 15, 2020 9:36:12 GMT -5
This is great feedback thanks Chuck. This past weekend I actually did a process of opening some tanks and closing others during usage to figure out which ones were filling up and which ones were not. That seemed to work out well. Thanks for the input.
Brian
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