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03-04-2023, 03:12 PM
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#1
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Montana Fan
Join Date: May 2017
Location: Apple Valley
Posts: 123
M.O.C. #19913
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Winterizing and antifreeze seeping in HW Heater
HI I have a 2017 Montana 5th wheel 3820 FK. I turned the two valves one to winterize the other to bypass the water heater. I pumped antifreeze in with the water pump and had some antifreeze still go into the hot water heater.
I have hear this will happen is one of the check valves is bad on the hot water heater.
If this is true is it the cold or hot? It was a small stream so I was able to winterize the rig. Always something!
Thanks
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03-04-2023, 04:27 PM
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#2
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Montana Master
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: woodstock
Posts: 513
M.O.C. #8174
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I’m not sure I have never had that happen did you pull the rod out of the hot water heater?
__________________
Ed
Montana Master
Woodstock Ga
2020 3931 FB Legacy
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03-04-2023, 04:55 PM
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#3
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Montana Master
Join Date: May 2019
Location: Alton
Posts: 2,237
M.O.C. #24086
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Looking at the diagram one of our members made,
Could be
the bypas valve
The Cold water check valve,
Or
The hot water check valve.
I use compressed air to blow out the pipes then pour antifreeze into the traps and holding tanks.
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03-04-2023, 05:11 PM
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#4
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Montana Master
Join Date: Oct 2012
Location: Box Elder
Posts: 4,397
M.O.C. #12947
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Why antifreeze is entering your WATER HEATER is because the only check valve that is on the hot water port is leaking, allowing antifreeze to enter the tank. The check valve needs to be cleaned or replaced.
https://www.amazon.com/Valterra-P234...7974984&sr=8-2
__________________
Bob & Becky
2012 3402RL
2012 Chevy 2500HD D/A CC 4WD
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03-04-2023, 05:57 PM
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#5
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Montana Fan
Join Date: May 2017
Location: Apple Valley
Posts: 123
M.O.C. #19913
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Possibilties
Quote:
Originally Posted by Daryles
Looking at the diagram one of our members made,
Could be
the bypas valve
The Cold water check valve,
Or
The hot water check valve.
I use compressed air to blow out the pipes then pour antifreeze into the traps and holding tanks.
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So it would be the bypass valve, or the two check valves but not the winterizing valve?
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03-04-2023, 05:58 PM
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#6
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Montana Fan
Join Date: May 2017
Location: Apple Valley
Posts: 123
M.O.C. #19913
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HI sorry for two responses they moved my post, here is my question and thanks for the diagram.
So it would be the bypass valve, or the two check valves but not the winterizing valve?
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03-04-2023, 05:58 PM
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#7
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Montana Fan
Join Date: May 2017
Location: Apple Valley
Posts: 123
M.O.C. #19913
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HI sorry for two responses they moved my post, here is my question and thanks for the diagram.
So it would be the bypass valve, or the two check valves but not the winterizing valve?
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03-04-2023, 05:59 PM
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#8
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Montana Fan
Join Date: May 2017
Location: Apple Valley
Posts: 123
M.O.C. #19913
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Thanks Ed yes that is where the antifreeze came out of
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03-04-2023, 06:01 PM
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#9
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Montana Fan
Join Date: May 2017
Location: Apple Valley
Posts: 123
M.O.C. #19913
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Could it not go through the cold side if the bypass valve is bad?
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03-04-2023, 07:44 PM
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#10
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Montana Master
Join Date: Oct 2012
Location: Box Elder
Posts: 4,397
M.O.C. #12947
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There is only one check valve and that is on the hot water port on the back of the water heater. That stops water from entering from that port. The bypass valve keeps cold water from entering into the cold water port of the water heater tank. The check valve is the most likely culprit when this happens. You get crud that accumulates in the water heater tank and that is what obstructs the check valve from closing fully. Regularly draining the tank and flushing the white debris out helps avoid this.
I'm very happy everyone still likes that plumbing diagram I drew years ago while we were at the Western Rally at Seven Feathers in Oregon, when the check valve in our water pump failed and it was overfilling our fresh water tank. That was in June of 2014.
__________________
Bob & Becky
2012 3402RL
2012 Chevy 2500HD D/A CC 4WD
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03-04-2023, 08:24 PM
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#11
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Montana Master
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: McKinney
Posts: 6,780
M.O.C. #6433
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I agree with Bob that it most likely the check valve on the water heater output connection. Those sometimes get crude from the water heater in them and don’t close completely. A flush wand used after draining the WH when winterizing helps get most of that sediment out.
The bypass valve is a 3 way ball valve and those are typically very reliable.
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Bill & Patricia
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03-05-2023, 06:23 AM
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#12
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Montana Master
Join Date: May 2019
Location: Alton
Posts: 2,237
M.O.C. #24086
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Rohrmann,
Thanks for the diagram.
It is most helpful. I refer to it regularly.
Any diagrams are most welcome when Keystone won't provide.
__________________
Daryl and Marianne,
2019 3130re 20th Anniversary Edition
2016 F350 Lariat
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03-27-2023, 09:59 AM
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#13
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Montana Master
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Virginia Beach
Posts: 699
M.O.C. #6958
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Daryles
Looking at the diagram one of our members made,
Could be
the bypas valve
The Cold water check valve,
Or
The hot water check valve.
I use compressed air to blow out the pipes then pour antifreeze into the traps and holding tanks.
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I have found that using compressed air like talked about above is a much better/easier way to winterize and is not hard to make an adapter from your local big box home improvement store. You need a threaded connection to go on the end of your air compressor hose that then mates up to a 90 degree swing valve (to allow you to start and stop air flow as needed) and then goes to a male water hose fitting. Only precaution is set the air pressure at no more than 40psi so you don't over pressurize the piping. If you have a canister water filter in your supply line somewhere you DON'T want to pump antifreeze through it as it will kill the filter material, but you also don't want to leave the shell of the filter filled with water as it will rupture the bottom of the canister if it freezes (I have proven this works). Using air pushes all the water out of the canister and I use less than a gallon of antifreeze in the traps and holding tanks.
__________________
Bill and Lisa Rearick
2007 Montana 3000RK
2020 GMC SIERRA 2500 Denali, 8 ft bed, SRW, Duramax Diesel w/10 speed Alison Transmission. GMC trailer pressure monitoring and rear camera
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03-27-2023, 01:00 PM
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#14
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Montana Master
Join Date: Oct 2018
Location: Anderson
Posts: 2,095
M.O.C. #22835
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The only problem I see with winterizing with compressed air (which I do sometimes), is blowing out the ice maker.
The other item is the washing machine. It's a Spledide stackable. According to the instructions for the machine, there are no options for winterizing with air, only RV antifreeze. So, for both the ice maker and the washer the lines have to have RV antifreeze, so it just makes the most sense to use RV antifreeze for everything. I do often blow out the antifreeze after I do that part. But haven't found a way to blow out the ice maker or the washer (yet).
__________________
Who you are right now is a sum total off all you use to be.
2019 Montana High Country 375FL
2014 Chevy Silverado Duramax, 6.6L Dually
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