I am winterizing my camper and cannot I am winterizing my camper and cannot find a picture online that looks like mine attached here. Can anyone shed some light on which are the drain valves? Thanks!
Is yours a real early 2015? It doesn't look quite like mine (built in Dec 2014).
I see what appears to be your hot water drain--it's the quarter-turn valve just below dead center of the photo.
Right below that the yellow flap thingy is your system pressure relief valve, which also doubles as your Alde HW tank drain.
What I don't see is a cold water drain--maybe the Alde drain serves the same purpose on yours.
I also don't see an Alde bypass loop and associated valves.
I'm wondering if yours was a real early build and some additional plumbing was added mid-model year. It was common (particularly back then) for PV/nuCamp to make changes on the fly.
Concor with @ScottG -- Yellow flap to drain the Alde. Hot water drain below dead center. No Alde bypass loop with cold water drain but there appears to be a shut-off valve for the cold water feed in the lower left. Are there any valves in the wheel well compartment?
2015 T@B Max S (White/Silver) -> 2014 Ford Escape 2.0L (turbo, AWD, factory tow)
This is what my valve configuration looks like. Photo is straight out of the official T@B winterizing manual. The Alde would be to the left of the photo. The cold and hot lines exiting the top of the photo lead to and from the Alde respectively, with the yellow flapper valve located on the cold line.
Thank you all! I suspect mine may be a late 2014 if that matters. I also did not see an obvious cold water drain. I’ll take a look at @breakaway's thread and look in the wheelwell tomorrow.
The 'dead center' white tee-handle hot water drain is the same as ours. You lift it up about a quarter inch to get it draining. There's another for the cold on ours, but it looks like the yellow valve is your cold drain.
Sometimes it's sticky - I had to pull ours apart to lube the o-ring on it before it would pop down easily again (there's a tiny, easy-to-lose clip on the side of the stem. It comes off, then you can lift the stem out of the valve to lube it).
Chan - near Buffalo NY 2014 S Maxx 2011 Tacoma 4cyl ... edit: 2022 Tacoma 6cyl - oh yeah!
The 'dead center' white tee-handle hot water drain is the same as ours. You lift it up about a quarter inch to get it draining. There's another for the cold on ours, but it looks like the yellow valve is your cold drain.
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Ahhh. I thought that valve looked a little peculiar in the photo--not a quarter turn valve as I stated above, but a tee-handle. Thanks for the clarification!
Ok, i am doing this now and getting no glycol-looking fluid or any volume other than a few drips from the drains under the trailer, other than than gray and black water drains.
This is what I have done:
1. Opened gray and black water drains. 2. Opened the fresh water tank drain. 3. Turned on the pump and run the kitchen sink, bathroom sink, and flushed toilet until the blow air (but I still hear water gurgling in the system). 4. Opened the hot water “T” valve and cold water yellow flapper valve.
All I’m getting is a few drops in a bucket under these drains in the rear.
My next step was to use the blowout valve with a 12v tire air compressor to clear out lines one at a time.
Is there a reason I’m not getting the gallons of water or glycol coming out of the drain?
It may be that you have just run most of the water out with the pump. However, I've found that draining from the Alde/yellow flapper valve sometimes won't start unless the system is under pressure. It's always the first drain I open because I want to make sure the Alde is really empty lest it becomes a giant Popsicle mold over winter.
You likely depressurized the system when you ran the pump dry. To be certain you get everything out, I suggest refilling and repressurizing the entire system (city water is easiest for this if you have it available), and then opening the yellow valve first and make sure something is coming out. To facilitate draining, make sure you open the sink faucets as well. You can then open the HW drain.
After you have drained whatever you can by gravity, close everything up and proceed with your compressor--pressurizing the system and blowing out each drain and faucet individually. You'll be surprised at how much more will come out when you do this!
Comments
2013 Toyota Highlander 3.5L V6
Yellow flap to drain the Alde.
Hot water drain below dead center.
No Alde bypass loop with cold water drain but there appears to be a shut-off valve for the cold water feed in the lower left.
Are there any valves in the wheel well compartment?
2014 S Maxx
2011 Tacoma 4cyl ... edit: 2022 Tacoma 6cyl - oh yeah!
A_Little_T@b'll_Do_Ya
This is what I have done:
1. Opened gray and black water drains.
2. Opened the fresh water tank drain.
3. Turned on the pump and run the kitchen sink, bathroom sink, and flushed toilet until the blow air (but I still hear water gurgling in the system).
4. Opened the hot water “T” valve and cold water yellow flapper valve.
All I’m getting is a few drops in a bucket under these drains in the rear.
My next step was to use the blowout valve with a 12v tire air compressor to clear out lines one at a time.
Is there a reason I’m not getting the gallons of water or glycol coming out of the drain?
thanks!
When winterizing you drain water from the Alde water tank which is like a sleeve that wraps around the Alde glycol heater tank.
Here is a PDF that should help.
https://us.v-cdn.net/5021717/uploads/editor/6r/eust2xvs5t11.pdf