RumRunner
Senior Member
- Location
- SCV Ca, USA
- Occupation
- Retired EE
As the saying goes, there are several ways to kill a cat (apologies to cat lovers.)
The options are available for the taking, but OP is not keen on going into a more complicated setup.
He doesn't even want to install a control transformer.
One viable option is deploying a bladder tank, but it's not simple as one might think. And it's not cheap either.
I'm using two of these bladder tanks. . .one for my Reverse Osmosis at home and another one for my RV.
The one at home is trouble-free (well . . .almost) because line water pressure is stable. Water pressure after the regulator is around 60 psi to 80 psi. For reverse osmosis to work properly-- the line pressure must not be below 45 psi.
To recharge the bladder is the tricky part. . . too high an air pressure will prevent the tank from getting full while low bladder air pressure will result in low water delivery. . .it will just trickle at the tap.
If you think that the unit in the house is PITA, the one in the RV is 20X more PITA.
Several campgrounds with their own water supply system operate in a hodge-podge of water settings. Some operate on too high a pressure depending on number of occupants in order to compensate demand.
I have changed my pressure regulator a few times. It often gets blown wide open and mess up the faucet valve seat and water valve for the toilet.
Perhaps, if we can setup crowd-funding (GO FUND ME) for OP, so he can use those recommended remedy to address the problem. . .and he'd be a "happy camper" so to speak.
The options are available for the taking, but OP is not keen on going into a more complicated setup.
He doesn't even want to install a control transformer.
One viable option is deploying a bladder tank, but it's not simple as one might think. And it's not cheap either.
I'm using two of these bladder tanks. . .one for my Reverse Osmosis at home and another one for my RV.
The one at home is trouble-free (well . . .almost) because line water pressure is stable. Water pressure after the regulator is around 60 psi to 80 psi. For reverse osmosis to work properly-- the line pressure must not be below 45 psi.
To recharge the bladder is the tricky part. . . too high an air pressure will prevent the tank from getting full while low bladder air pressure will result in low water delivery. . .it will just trickle at the tap.
If you think that the unit in the house is PITA, the one in the RV is 20X more PITA.
Several campgrounds with their own water supply system operate in a hodge-podge of water settings. Some operate on too high a pressure depending on number of occupants in order to compensate demand.
I have changed my pressure regulator a few times. It often gets blown wide open and mess up the faucet valve seat and water valve for the toilet.
Perhaps, if we can setup crowd-funding (GO FUND ME) for OP, so he can use those recommended remedy to address the problem. . .and he'd be a "happy camper" so to speak.