Long Term Overland Set Up Questions

Sounds like you will have fun. I can talk about water as I think I have figured out a great way to not worry about it.
GuzzleH20 has the idea that you can convert to a setup in your Class A. A little ingenuity goes a long way. I did not buy theirs but created my own.
Think this way:
I want to fill my fresh water tank from “any” water source within 50 feet of the rig. Lake, 1” deep stream, pond, river, creek, etc…
Drop a “sump pump” into the source water to lift it to a bucket by your rig. Now you have to plumb in either a line to the onboard 12v pump or plumb a new pump into your fresh water lines. Then just drop the intake line in the bucket!
Proven concept in my rig!

Standard .5 micron filter
UV light (most expensive item)

A great and well-designed system! What is the pump's flow rate when you want water for your appliances, and is the UV unit rated for that flow rate? I am asking because the dosage depends on the flow rate.
Do you use a mesh / paper filter to protect your pump and the .5 micron filter? Makes sense if you draw from a pond or river.

Cheers,

Sebastian
 
Sounds like you will have fun. I can talk about water as I think I have figured out a great way to not worry about it.
GuzzleH20 has the idea that you can convert to a setup in your Class A. A little ingenuity goes a long way. I did not buy theirs but created my own.
Think this way:
I want to fill my fresh water tank from “any” water source within 50 feet of the rig. Lake, 1” deep stream, pond, river, creek, etc…
Drop a “sump pump” into the source water to lift it to a bucket by your rig. Now you have to plumb in either a line to the onboard 12v pump or plumb a new pump into your fresh water lines. Then just drop the intake line in the bucket!
Proven concept in my rig!

Standard .5 micron filter
UV light (most expensive item)

A great and well-designed system! What is the pump's flow rate when you want water for your appliances, and is the UV unit rated for that flow rate? I am asking because the dosage depends on the flow rate.
Do you use a mesh / paper filter to protect your pump and the .5 micron filter? Makes sense if you draw from a pond or river.

Cheers,

Sebastian

Thank you for your kind comments. The pump is rated at 3gpm. I will have to look up the UV light flow rate as I can’t remember. The process of drawing water from say a pond is filtered by a well pump sediment filter before it goes into the 5gal bucket. Then the typical pump strainer, then pump, then .5micron 5” filter, then the UV light. The only change I have done to the system is reducing the filter size from 10” to 5”.
 
Thank you for your kind comments. The pump is rated at 3gpm. I will have to look up the UV light flow rate as I can’t remember. The process of drawing water from say a pond is filtered by a well pump sediment filter before it goes into the 5gal bucket. Then the typical pump strainer, then pump, then .5micron 5” filter, then the UV light. The only change I have done to the system is reducing the filter size from 10” to 5”.

Ok, that would be important to know. I am asking because I developed a similar system in a portable case. My pump is rated at 4 gpm (15 lpm) and behind all filters (activated carbon + .1 micron) I get 2.6 gpm. Thats why I had to choose a rather large UV unit for this pump. The UV is rated at 4.4 gpm (16.6 lpm or 1000 l/h). Below you'll see the dimension of the UV :D

Anyway, I recommend to protect activated carbon and membrane filters with eg. a 5" 5 micron pre-filter. This will increase the lifetime of your pump, membrane and activated carbon filters and prevent clogging.
 

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Thank you for your kind comments. The pump is rated at 3gpm. I will have to look up the UV light flow rate as I can’t remember. The process of drawing water from say a pond is filtered by a well pump sediment filter before it goes into the 5gal bucket. Then the typical pump strainer, then pump, then .5micron 5” filter, then the UV light. The only change I have done to the system is reducing the filter size from 10” to 5”.

Ok, that would be important to know. I am asking because I developed a similar system in a portable case. My pump is rated at 4 gpm (15 lpm) and behind all filters (activated carbon + .1 micron) I get 2.6 gpm. Thats why I had to choose a rather large UV unit for this pump. The UV is rated at 4.4 gpm (16.6 lpm or 1000 l/h). Below you'll see the dimension of the UV :D

Anyway, I recommend to protect activated carbon and membrane filters with eg. a 5" 5 micron pre-filter. This will increase the lifetime of your pump, membrane and activated carbon filters and prevent clogging.

UV light max flow rate is 2.2 gpm.