I tried one of these pumps (pictured) with the shower head removed, to pump water into the vans tanks and it did an ok job. Sure makes life a lot easier than lifting a heavy bladder up and using a funnel. The problem is I had to empty the water bladder into a bucket first as the pump wouldn't fit into the bladder hole, which is 30mm wide. Not sure how wide the pump body is offhand, but what is available to stepdown the body size to the bladder hole size? I need a magic stepdown hose or something. Anyone got any ideas please.
Cheers, John.
-- Edited by meetoo on Sunday 5th of March 2017 08:14:27 PM
I tried one of these pumps (pictured) with the shower head removed, to pump water into the vans tanks and it did an ok job. Sure makes life a lot easier than lifting a heavy bladder up and using a funnel. The problem is I had to empty the water bladder into a bucket first as the pump wouldn't fit into the bladder hole, which is 30mm wide. Not sure how wide the pump body is offhand, but what is available to stepdown the body size to the bladder hole size? I need a magic stepdown hose or something. Anyone got any ideas please.
Cheers, John.
-- Edited by meetoo on Sunday 5th of March 2017 08:14:27 PM
Cheap solution - 1/2 inch garden hose with non return valve on end to keep primed.
Expensive solution - but marine in line pump and drop in through top. I use one of these to drop into rivers etc and pump from truck tanks into van.
Both easy solutions/
cheers Baz
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Why is it so? Professor Julius Sumner Miller, a profound influence on my life, who explained science to us on TV in the 60's.
Those wretched low power portable shower units are expensive and fragile. The shower heads are fiddly and hard to mount. You are better off to get a centirifical builge pump and gerry rig the thing using reticulation fittings or some such.