We had a similar problem. First you need to try to dump. I am assuming
that the tank is full or near full. If it is not, you can raise the
rear enough on ramps to get the slop away from the dump valve. If it is
full, you can try to force it. Another idea is to try to loosen the
stainless steel screws holding the valve together and try opening the
valve again. If all else fails you can perhaps drill the center of the
slider with an extra long drill like the electricians use to drill and
pull wire in existing construction. Thread it up the dump pipe like a
Proctologist (can I say that in public) and be ready to jump back when
the dam breaks. After you have dumped, the valve can be removed and
disassembled if it is a more modern Tetford type. You can then clean it
and rebuild it with a kit available from any large RV place. If you
have sacrificed the valve, the Tetford was a direct replacement for ours
Good luck.
Eric Tipton
etipton
-----Original Message-----
From: Gplymate [mailto:Gplymate]
Sent: Wednesday, September 22, 1999 10:20 AM
To: gmcmotorhome
Subject: GMC: Holding Tank Constipated!
Hi GMCnetters,
We just took our project coach on its first shakedown
cruise. Everything
performed beautifully, and everything worked the way GMC
designed it to.
Drove just like a big limo, even crossing three mountain
ranges. Although a
little slow going up, it made up for it coming down.
Man, were we impressed!
Then... five days later and 700 miles into the trip...
we stopped to dump the
holding tank. Surprise! The dump valve was frozen
shut! It was a little
embarrassing holding on to that sewer hose at the dump
station and nothing
coming out. All we could do was pack up and drive on...
with the holding
tank sloshing.
It is the original GMC setup and had sat for at least
four years without
being used.
Anybody got any ideas on how the slide valve can be
freed up?
Or, does it have to be replaced?
Thanks for any advice.
Glenn
78 Kingsley
Independence, OR
that the tank is full or near full. If it is not, you can raise the
rear enough on ramps to get the slop away from the dump valve. If it is
full, you can try to force it. Another idea is to try to loosen the
stainless steel screws holding the valve together and try opening the
valve again. If all else fails you can perhaps drill the center of the
slider with an extra long drill like the electricians use to drill and
pull wire in existing construction. Thread it up the dump pipe like a
Proctologist (can I say that in public) and be ready to jump back when
the dam breaks. After you have dumped, the valve can be removed and
disassembled if it is a more modern Tetford type. You can then clean it
and rebuild it with a kit available from any large RV place. If you
have sacrificed the valve, the Tetford was a direct replacement for ours
Good luck.
Eric Tipton
etipton
-----Original Message-----
From: Gplymate [mailto:Gplymate]
Sent: Wednesday, September 22, 1999 10:20 AM
To: gmcmotorhome
Subject: GMC: Holding Tank Constipated!
Hi GMCnetters,
We just took our project coach on its first shakedown
cruise. Everything
performed beautifully, and everything worked the way GMC
designed it to.
Drove just like a big limo, even crossing three mountain
ranges. Although a
little slow going up, it made up for it coming down.
Man, were we impressed!
Then... five days later and 700 miles into the trip...
we stopped to dump the
holding tank. Surprise! The dump valve was frozen
shut! It was a little
embarrassing holding on to that sewer hose at the dump
station and nothing
coming out. All we could do was pack up and drive on...
with the holding
tank sloshing.
It is the original GMC setup and had sat for at least
four years without
being used.
Anybody got any ideas on how the slide valve can be
freed up?
Or, does it have to be replaced?
Thanks for any advice.
Glenn
78 Kingsley
Independence, OR