Overview of Our Recirculating Shower | RV Renovation

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  • čas přidán 4. 03. 2021
  • We've been living in our Remodeled RV for a few months now, and everything seems to be working. We thought we'd give you an overview of how we plumbed our shower loop. This system can effectively give you an unlimited hot water shower using only a couple of gallons of water.
    We are attempting the daunting task of designing and installing a recirculating, filtering shower system in our RV.
    Big Blue Filters: amzn.to/3ilhYsU
    Activated Carbon Filter: amzn.to/30rC3I2
    5 Micron Filters: amzn.to/33j3gys
    Motorized valves: amzn.to/3cQmqyO
    Pex connectors: amzn.to/33lSIic
    Pex crimper: amzn.to/3l4lYjb
    Pex crimp ring: amzn.to/3iiFd77
    pex piping: amzn.to/3ihJveJ
    5Gal Water storage tank: amzn.to/34eirs1
    Heat Exchanger: amzn.to/2G95DeA
    Arduino Mega: amzn.to/2SfRjD8
    Relay Board: amzn.to/2GpgRLJ
    UV Filter: amzn.to/2SexgVO
    Visit our website for more information about locations and for photos of our trips and projects.
    WildLanterns.com
    Music is from Epidemic Sound: www.epidemicsound.com/referra...
    Some of our Gear:
    Small Camera: amzn.to/33Y6DL2
    Our Gimbal: amzn.to/3qLvStT
    Camera: amzn.to/37pp36Y
    GoPro: amzn.to/39sleyP
    Microphone: amzn.to/2v8DvSR
    ND Filter: amzn.to/2Gafwos
    GoPro Hero 8 Black: amzn.to/3bIFXjt
    GoPro Media Mod: gopro.com/en/us/shop/mounts-a...
    We are a part of the Amazon Affiliate program. We get a small commission off of anything you buy from one of these links. So thank you!
    #tinyhouse #DIY #remodeling #DIYstorage #remodel #simpleliving #modernfarmhouse #RVbathroom #showerloop #recirculatingshower #hourshower
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Komentáře • 230

  • @John5ive
    @John5ive Před 11 měsíci +2

    been doing research on this type of shower. easily the best setup that i have seen in about 30 videos

  • @1wtrahan
    @1wtrahan Před 3 lety +13

    Awesome idea you are a genuine genius my man that should be in all RV no doubt about it .loved the vid Thanks

  • @queeningod
    @queeningod Před 8 měsíci +1

    I would want the option to dump the water coming from the faucet to the grey tank while and after showering. So, get in and rinse (water to grey tank). Shut off water. Lather up. Rinse (water to grey tank). Then switch to recirculating for continuous water (essentially clean water now). When done empty to grey tank.
    So next shower im not using same shower water but i was still able to take a long shower w/o using as much water.

  • @thomasdrake8630
    @thomasdrake8630 Před 3 lety +3

    Way easier in a new build space. The hunt for water in a permanent bugout situation is endless if you are dumping greywater...Going for it...

  • @dawnsnyder216
    @dawnsnyder216 Před 3 lety +1

    Fantastic, you are a genius to create this. Thank you for sharing.

  • @zorroinhell5549
    @zorroinhell5549 Před 3 lety +1

    This is a great idea. Well done young man.

  • @jimfraser8691
    @jimfraser8691 Před 2 lety +1

    Well done Ryan great workmanship awesome idea

  • @christianarias4850
    @christianarias4850 Před rokem

    One of the best explanation ever, thank you for getting straight to the point.

  • @lukes6819
    @lukes6819 Před rokem

    Awesome job mate. I've been racking my brain trying to get a sensible line diagram. Thank you for posting

  • @johnstuckey7197
    @johnstuckey7197 Před 2 lety +1

    Fabulous build! Kudos!

  • @janetibbles5814
    @janetibbles5814 Před 2 lety +1

    Genius engineering.

  • @coryarnett362
    @coryarnett362 Před 3 lety +1

    Fantastic! Thanks for sharing.

  • @hosstylexpedition7900
    @hosstylexpedition7900 Před 3 lety +5

    Dude! That is awesome! Got me scratching my head trying to think how I'd rig that in my class A. I'd probably have to clean out the basement a fair bit, we're full time and packrats. I agree it would be a lot easier to do as a new build than a retrofit to an existing system, but it might just be worth it. Seriously, that is really cool!

    • @redchannel6346
      @redchannel6346 Před 3 lety

      🤪🤪🤪 too difficult... try to learn 🤒🤒🤒

  • @lrsmith6037
    @lrsmith6037 Před 2 lety +1

    One of the most useful videos on CZcams

  • @rewardsoverwater7821
    @rewardsoverwater7821 Před 2 lety +2

    It was nice to see someone do it. I'm still waiting for someone to do a free standing shower with solar panels to run the pumps and water solar tubes for hot water and off the shelves parts no manufacturing parts. Thank you.

  • @CaliforniaBushman
    @CaliforniaBushman Před 3 lety

    Came across recirculating shower idea yesterday. Love it!

    • @ryanandsu
      @ryanandsu  Před 3 lety +1

      Check out showerloop.org. It’s an older site, but from what I can tell, the origins of the idea.

  • @BradMorrisKA3YAN
    @BradMorrisKA3YAN Před 6 měsíci

    I love everything about this except loss of your wetbays. In our Class C, we just couldn't sacrifice this amount of space. Very cool setup and you did a bangup job.

  • @berjaoui92
    @berjaoui92 Před 2 lety

    Thank you for sharing the necessary furniture list

  • @gonzzo5597
    @gonzzo5597 Před 3 lety +4

    You need to sell this to RV manufacturers!.....
    I wish I had the determination and creativity you guys have!....
    Keep up the great work and keep posting more great videos!...
    Than you!

  • @bigdanc.8429
    @bigdanc.8429 Před rokem

    Great setup. That would be awesome for boondocking.

  • @oilspeculatorhater
    @oilspeculatorhater Před 3 lety +1

    Real impressive.

  • @katieh3236
    @katieh3236 Před 3 lety +1

    Amazing dude!

  • @brittjansen9737
    @brittjansen9737 Před 3 lety +2

    Realy cool!

  • @ZillaYT
    @ZillaYT Před 5 měsíci

    Well done! I’m gonna do this on a new build.

  • @NKBobcat
    @NKBobcat Před 2 lety

    A little bit of genious going on there.

  • @sethwengermusic
    @sethwengermusic Před rokem

    That's awesome! It's probably only a matter of time until someone builds an all-in-one system with power in, freshwater in, grey tank out, shower in and out, with a waterproof remote control

  • @loganmorris8624
    @loganmorris8624 Před 3 lety +2

    I love you guys ❤️

  • @kkz2dgz
    @kkz2dgz Před rokem

    Thank You !!

  • @thomasjehnkins1986
    @thomasjehnkins1986 Před rokem

    I've now decided I do NOT want a complicated shower system but will now just use a basin or bowl to wash up like they did in the old days lol

    • @thomasjehnkins1986
      @thomasjehnkins1986 Před rokem

      because NOW you need to use/purchase wasteful FILTERS/plumbing, etc VS. a washcloth

  • @alexzbarazky3038
    @alexzbarazky3038 Před 2 lety +1

    Awesome work, man! Also, I have that same shirt, lol

  • @benediktmaximilianschuren5541

    It's amazing, I'm currently building a Camper myself and this helped so much, thank you :)

  • @WanderlustEstate
    @WanderlustEstate Před rokem

    I'm preparing to do a van build and the thing I missed more than anything while living on the road for 8 years was a long hot shower. I would love to do a recirculating shower for a million different reasons. I haven't been huge on building my CZcams channel, but I'm one of the first 5 channels in RV and van life. I'd really like to do a call with you and pick your brain on how you did this. I'd be happy to promote your channel.

  • @macoydacoycoy2853
    @macoydacoycoy2853 Před 5 měsíci

    It's probably less complicated if you recirculate the water from gray water tank back to fresh water tank. Some RV have 2 fresh water tanks already installed. Separate their lines and use one for recirculation and the other for drinking and cooking. When you're hooked up, just disable the recycling mechanism since you don't need it.

  • @DallasFP
    @DallasFP Před rokem

    It’s been a year. Any insight on your use/ leaks/ happy accident with the system? Thanks for the videos! Glad you have time again for videos.

  • @behanner
    @behanner Před 2 měsíci

    Can yall do an update on how well this has worked. Was fascinated by the idea when yall did it.

  • @celsoemerich3568
    @celsoemerich3568 Před 2 lety +2

    One of the best shower water recycling schemes. I have difficulties with electronics ( the physics part is ok and very well explained and enlightening video . <
    Could you post video of how to use the electronics components and how to connect?
    congratulations

    • @ryanandsu
      @ryanandsu  Před 2 lety +1

      Thanks! I am trying to get my act together to do that. We have finally arrived at our spot for the holidays. So I’m hoping to get that put up.

  • @tactrix1h
    @tactrix1h Před 2 lety +2

    RVs should be designed in a way in which you can easily access everything from either the inside, or by just walking outside and opening up a hatch. If they were built that way none of this would be an issue, it would make life a lot easier all around, more importantly it would make things that break or are not working properly a breeze to replace.

  • @mrmister3020
    @mrmister3020 Před 3 lety

    Love the idea. Would all natural soaps made with Shea butter "work" better? Filter better? Homemade ingredients? Salts, baking powder/soda, bath butters?

  • @simonescaini
    @simonescaini Před 2 lety

    Very nice system!!!!! i was trying to figuring out how you close the grey tank drainage during loop mode.

    • @ryanandsu
      @ryanandsu  Před 2 lety

      Thanks! We considered a bunch of different ways to do it with valves or something similar. But in the end, we went simple. We installed two drains in the floor of the shower and just use a rubber plug to plug whichever drain we don’t want to use.

  • @RustyCas999
    @RustyCas999 Před rokem

    Very slick. I had not even considered having an “RV park” mode and I haven’t heard/seen anyone else mention it, so kudos on that. I am not a programmer so I doubt I could make a control system like yours, but I wonder if it could be duplicated using 3-way valves that could all be powered/switched with a single “mode switch.” Also, how well does the heat exchanger work? Do you have parameters for the inlet/outlet temps and flow rates for both sides? Do you have valves to throttle flows to get optimum heat exchange?

  • @johnearle8156
    @johnearle8156 Před 2 lety +3

    Good video
    Is there a difference to the life of the filters between using soap + a non soap like Dove body wash?

  • @briandavis9975
    @briandavis9975 Před 2 lety +1

    I've seen a couple of these set ups yours is the coolest yet. I've been thinking of doing this but no one goes in to detail on it okay a little bit of where I'm at in my build now I have a forty foot MCI MC9 bus I'm converting I have 250 gallons fresh water tank, propane on demand hot water 250 black and gray combo tank and the water pump I'm Thinking I'm going to use a small well pump that has the expansion tank built on it I have 3/4 and 1/2 pex the pump the water heater are 3/4 main lines from the tank are 3/4. None of this is installed yet because I'm just not there in the build yet I'm at the spray foam stage
    But it won't be long.
    like you I want to be off grid for extended amounts of time and not worry about the water.i have three storage bays but the front bay will be used for my inverters and battery storage one of the other bays will be used for the black tank and utilities in and out components so I have room for this in the last bay or in this case the middle bay the black tank takes up the last bay closest to the rear wheels I do believe my propane water heat can do recirculating for like radiant floor heat so I would need to figure that part out oh I have about 40 gallons of usable propane on board also.
    Any direction you might have would be great thank you for any help.

    • @ryanandsu
      @ryanandsu  Před 2 lety +1

      Thanks! We do not profess to be DIY people at all. If the details are a little shaky, it's because we are trying to just document what we are doing (good or bad) and not trying to show how to do something. haha.
      All of our piping is 1/2" and it works fantastic for recirculating the water. There is a ton of pressure and flow. We also have a 6.5GPM pump dedicated to the recirculating system. That also has been fantastic. No complaints about pressure or flow. The pump we bought is a marine pump (Seaflo) that runs on 12v. It came with a pre filter. It's a little strainer basket that keeps particulate matter from going through the pump. I definitely recommend using a strainer before the pump. But do not use the little one a lot of pumps come with. Get a bigger one. The small one clogged up after about 4 uses. It did strain really well, but for a recirculating system, you are introducing a lot of clothing fuzz, hair, etc. The larger the prefilter, the more use you will get before having to empty it.
      Also, something I didn't do but wish I did was put a manual valve in place between the tank output and the strainer filter. That way you can shut off the output and clean the filter without having to Drain the recirculating system.
      The heat exchanger has been working well unless it is really cold outside. If the water is cold to start with, the heat exchanger takes some time to add heat to the water. Sometimes, we will leave the shower running for a while on a loop before using it just to let the water heat up. If you are adding new fresh water every time you use the shower, then it's not a big deal because the new water is most likely already warm. But we've tried to really go light on water usage and reused the water multiple days in a row.

  • @ryanjones7681
    @ryanjones7681 Před 2 lety +1

    Do you have to buy new filters? Can you clean them out? How often do you go through em? What ones need changed more? What kind of soap do you use?

  • @chrisgentry4427
    @chrisgentry4427 Před 4 měsíci

    Arduino ftw!

  • @markatkinson4043
    @markatkinson4043 Před rokem

    Wished I could do that type of controller you used.

  • @MrAndrestal
    @MrAndrestal Před 5 měsíci

    Hi tx for sharing, it is so clear. Thanks.
    I have a question about the waterheater you use. Which one is it, brand, type etc? I try to find it all as well but so far not succeeded in finding the right waterheater to do this job.
    Hope to hear from you about this. 😊

  • @mwatercress
    @mwatercress Před 8 měsíci

    I would love to see your review of the system after a couple of years. How often do you change the water?

  • @carlosvaquerofoto
    @carlosvaquerofoto Před 3 lety +1

    That is awesome guys, good job!! I'm researching about this topic right now for my sprinter van conversion and I wanted to ask you why not buying one of those 5 stages under sink kits? What is the difference? Maybe is the amount of water you can obtain from each one of them? If you could help me with this, that would be awesome!!!

    • @ryanandsu
      @ryanandsu  Před 3 lety +3

      It’s the longevity of the filters. These are 4.5”x10” canisters that are for whole house water filtration. You can’t get the same flow and life out of the smaller drinking water filters they sell for under sink filtration. With this, we easily can get 5.5 gpm. The main restriction is the pump volume and shower head flow rate. Having the filters also lowers the amount of pressure required pre filter in order to force the water through. So it’s easier on the pump.

  • @mrjjman2010
    @mrjjman2010 Před 3 lety +1

    That’s awesome. Question if you don’t mind. Where do you tie the drain from the 5 gallon tank into the grey water tank?

    • @ryanandsu
      @ryanandsu  Před 3 lety +2

      We used another valve that sends the 5 gallon water through some pex into the shower drain that drains into the grey tank. It feed into the drain above the p-trap.

  • @spwim
    @spwim Před rokem

    Pretty awesome, but do you block off the grey water drain when circulating too? S

  • @Tesla-Cannon
    @Tesla-Cannon Před rokem

    I was curious about a two-drain system so you could also use it as a regular shower! I think you're the only build where I've seen that. So using soap hasn't been a problem?

  • @gideonporter537
    @gideonporter537 Před rokem

    Can you do an update of how the recirculating shower has worked out? Was it worth it? Issues?

  • @SillyPandie
    @SillyPandie Před 2 lety

    Love this setup! Question: What temperature does the hot water going INTO the heat exchanger need to be to heat the shower water? I'm looking to do a water to water heat exchange that moves water from my fresh tank through a hot water heater, to heat the shower water without contaminating my fresh water. Also, how do you keep your filters from leaking? I'm having issues with inconsistent leaking between filters, and around the lip of the filter top. Any tips would be GREATLY appreciated!

    • @ryanandsu
      @ryanandsu  Před 2 lety

      I’m not sure what it needs to be. Our is very hot. Like 140 degrees F. But I think the bigger thing is flow. It needs to be able to transfer the heat out of the hot water and then get nice hot water in there again to keep the transfer going.

  • @chrispeterson
    @chrispeterson Před 3 lety

    Looks great. I am about to tackle this same project in my van. I am struggling with the heat exchanger piece. I saw you had another small pump right before it on the fresh water side. How are you circulating the hot water on the other side of the exchange? Are you turning off other valves and creating a temporary closed loop system that cycles the "hot" water on the fresh side with the small pump? I don't quite see that detailed in your diagram. Any details would be appreciated.

    • @ryanandsu
      @ryanandsu  Před 3 lety +1

      Yes. Exactly. I closed off both fresh water valves. So the hot water is pushed through the heat exchanger and then a check valve before being pushed into the cold water line.

  • @axlem.6977
    @axlem.6977 Před 28 dny

    Hi, I love this build. I wanted to get into ardwinos as well. Could you point me to some resources so I can do something similar for my bus? Thank you

  • @pkeeney
    @pkeeney Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks for clearing things up! Does your cold water return (when recirculating) steadily heat up over the course of a shower? Or does the warm drain water lose its heat as it's running through the filters?

    • @ryanandsu
      @ryanandsu  Před 3 lety +2

      It can depending on how much water you have mixing with it coming from the heat exchanger. I would say, on average, we lose 3-5 degrees just running the cold tap with no added heat. But that’s been in colder temperatures. When it’s warm out, we sometimes don’t need the heat exchanger to add more heat to the system. I typically adjust the temp a few times during a shower for the heating up/cooling down effect of adding more or less heat to the system.
      Hope that makes sense.

  • @ourvanlives4736
    @ourvanlives4736 Před 7 měsíci

    I see your list of products used in the project. Can you explain to me how to set up the relay board and micro processor?

  • @BorealWilderness
    @BorealWilderness Před rokem

    Nice set-up. How does your system handle soap? Does it clog the filters?

  • @ddimondd
    @ddimondd Před rokem

    Great design... are you still using it? What source of heat do you use to run through the heat exchanger?
    I found that by putting the dirty soapy water in the holding tank first left the tank kind of scummy after a while.
    I changed things around a little....from shower drain through filters and uv then into holding and from holding tank to shower. Only draw back is its a 2 pump system

  • @djpWilson
    @djpWilson Před 2 lety

    Great presentation. Have you been running this long enough to have a good feeling for how frequently you need to swap out the filters?

    • @ryanandsu
      @ryanandsu  Před 2 lety +3

      We've had it for about a year. But we haven't used it much this last trip. We've either been out of dry camping areas or they've been booked. I am planning on replacing them every 6 months unless the need arises to replace them earlier. that's also what I have heard from other people who have similar systems. The filters rinse out really well. The thing that will kill them is letting them sit.

  • @Spacer7777
    @Spacer7777 Před rokem

    Orbital systems is the founder of water recikling

  • @JohnBraman413
    @JohnBraman413 Před 2 lety

    you have a video on how you setup that arduino and relay board?

  • @NicInLvNv
    @NicInLvNv Před 2 lety

    Thank You for the description and details of the shower renovation. Do you have a wiring drawing of the use of the relay boards used?
    Thank You again!

    • @ryanandsu
      @ryanandsu  Před 2 lety +1

      I think I drew one up. I will take a look at what I have. I am planning on mapping it all out and making a post about it over on our website: Wildlanterns.com. We are just on the road right now and I won't be able to get to it until we are back in a more stationary place, probably for the holidays.

    • @NicInLvNv
      @NicInLvNv Před 2 lety

      @@ryanandsu thank You for your reply! Looking forward to seeing more from your work!

  • @jimligon1460
    @jimligon1460 Před 3 lety +1

    This could be greatly simplified by adding a second dedicated shower head for the recirculated water

  • @eher_meh
    @eher_meh Před rokem

    Exactly how I would have designed it. But with using one idea from the original system: no holding tank, just the shower you are standing in - maybe easier to keep clean...

  • @majulenparah
    @majulenparah Před rokem

    Based on average use how many gallons would you assume you can circulate before the full set of filters need to be replaced? Whats the approximate cost to replace all the filters?

  • @MJ-ge6jz
    @MJ-ge6jz Před 2 lety

    Just subscribed to your channel. Making a recirculating shower is not easy. I've seen some companies still working on the system for over a year! It would be great if you setup a " How to PDF" document... an income source? How do you clean the system? Some builders will reverse the water flow a few times before the replace / cleaning the filters manually.

    • @ryanandsu
      @ryanandsu  Před 2 lety

      Thanks! We were going to try to get a back flush system working, but simplified it down. So we manually clean the filters. The worst is for them to sit for a while. If it’s used pretty regularly, they aren’t too bad. It’s also good to note that this system doesn’t filter out all the soap. You would need a pretty large sand filter to do that from what I’ve researched. This one does a great job for how compact it is. We wanted something that was better than the ones that just push unfiltered water back through. The unfiltered ones do exist as retail systems. But I think the filtered ones have taken so long because they are working hard on water purity.

  • @DIY-AC
    @DIY-AC Před 3 lety

    Excellent video amen.
    How well do those plated heat exchangers work? Do you continuously circulate hot water through the heat exchanger during a shower? Will the heat exchanger hold heat well for a while?
    Thanks so much for sharing,
    James, Rescue Kitty😺 & Snowvan!

    • @ryanandsu
      @ryanandsu  Před 3 lety +2

      It works pretty well on warm water. If the water is cold, it has a tough time keeping up. We have a hot water loop continuously running through the heat exchanger while we are using it. Otherwise, the blades on the heat exchanger transfer all their heat over in a matter of seconds and get cold. So it needs the hot water constantly reheating it.

    • @DIY-AC
      @DIY-AC Před 3 lety

      @@ryanandsu ohh, Thank you. Very good to know for sure!

  • @andreayarrington5210
    @andreayarrington5210 Před 3 lety +2

    Can you write that system in steps? You did a great job!

    • @ryanandsu
      @ryanandsu  Před 2 lety +1

      Thanks! I have been working on documenting it and posting it to our website. But it's been a slow process. I will definitely update everyone when I have it put together. I am not a DIY how to type person usually because even I go into these not knowing what I am doing. But on the other side of it, I might be able to give some advice. :)

  • @CharlieKrivda
    @CharlieKrivda Před 3 lety +2

    Awesome info. Trying to figure out how you heat the water? I was going to do an inline on-demand heating solution, but I figured it would get hotter and hotter the longer you ran your shower, and I dont want to pull fresh/cold water into the system to keep balance if i dont have to.

    • @ryanandsu
      @ryanandsu  Před 3 lety

      We explained it a little more in a follow up video. Hopefully that helps.
      czcams.com/video/dhpBTra9bXs/video.html

    • @alejandrogarcia1482
      @alejandrogarcia1482 Před 3 lety +1

      @@ryanandsu hi great video i have the same question i can't find your video explaining that great exchanger. Please let me know how to search it. Thanks

    • @kimwilliams5165
      @kimwilliams5165 Před 2 lety

      This is great info. I also have questions and would like more details, but the link wouldn't work. At 6:02 he explains he has a T in pipe before exchange that diverts recycled water back to cold line, so it doesn't waste fresh to cool hot water.
      I see with a tank style & exchange you don't have to worry about mixing recycled hot water with sink hot water, if it's used at same time. I was also thinking about a on demand heater. Btw my understanding of them is they are set to a temp an only heat enough to bring incoming water to that temp. So if water flowing in is 98° and it's set to say 130° then it will heat the 32° difference. With a tankless you could tie in between a no backflow to protect freshwater tank and the heater, but how to segregate the water demand between the shower and sinks if needed at the same time? They make a camp style on demand heater for about $150 that might be able to tie into propane lines. I need to look into reviews to see if it's cheaper/efficient to just separate hot water for the shower.

  • @simondabbs6053
    @simondabbs6053 Před 3 lety +1

    Great video with lots of good info. Thanks for posting. I'm still trying to understand how the shower water is heated. Am In correct that hot water goes from your water heater through the heat exchanger and then flows back to your hot water heater in a closed loop? And that the water used for the shower is heated only by the heat exchanger so that none of that water actually goes through the actual water heater? I'm trying to figure out a similar system where I can retain the integrity / cleanliness of my hot water heater, but still use it to heat the shower water. I like your idea of two drains, allowing you to use soap / shampoo which can be drained into the grey tank, and then switch over and use the recirculating function with minimal soap / debris going through the filters. Good job.

    • @ryanandsu
      @ryanandsu  Před 3 lety +1

      Yes. That is correct on the heat exchanger. It keeps the two loops separate. They do not cross contaminate.
      I built in a hot water loop for the water heater that pulls hot water through the exchanger and then send it back to the cold water input to be reheated. Just like you would for a house hold system to get instant hot water on the far side of the house from the water heater. That loop heats the heat exchanger. Then the recirculating water goes through the other side of the exchanger and pulls heat out with the water never touching the fresh water. It’s basically a big heat sink transferring heat from hot to cold.

    • @simondabbs6053
      @simondabbs6053 Před 3 lety

      @@ryanandsu Thanks so much for the speedy reply. Much appreciated. This sounds great. I don't want to contaminate my water heater with recirculated water as I also want to be able to have hot water in the sink. This sounds like it may solve both of these issues. Thanks again.

  • @tucktucker7439
    @tucktucker7439 Před 2 lety

    I'm wondering about the extra tank, why did you decide not to pull from the grey water tank directly? Was it because the water was at least warm in your 5 gallon tank? I have considered filtering the grey water for use in the toilet and shower, and forcing the fresh water to the sinks only, unless there was no grey water.

  • @uramalakia
    @uramalakia Před 3 lety

    So you opted for a heat exchanger (only)? Would having a heating element within the loop be more energy efficient? Since you don't have to heat the water from sratch once it's up to temp. but just cover the heat lost during recirculation... Clever system. I like the use of that heat exchanger and the seperate 5 gallon tank. And the accessibility for maintenance. Is the 5 gallon tank easily accessible for cleaning? Does it need cleaning often? Have you tried taking the recirculated water for analysis to see where you're at? How often do you need to swap out the filters? How do you cope with soapy water? Have you tried adding magnesium salt (i think that's what is used...) to cope with soapy water creating deposits in the system? Would insulating the pipes reduce heat loss and improve energy efficiency? I'm rambling... I have tons of questions. I'll try to see if uncle google can cough up any answers. Thank you for sharing.

    • @ryanandsu
      @ryanandsu  Před 3 lety +2

      Yes. We went with a heat exchanger only. Mainly because we didn’t want to introduce another heating element that would draw off our batteries. Using the heat exchanger with our water heater let’s us use either electric or propane. And the thought was that we could dump the holding tank and refresh the water in the loop with warm or hot water whenever we wanted to shower. It’s not as efficient as reusing the water for several days, but with this method, we don’t have to heat the water from cold with the heat exchanger.
      I haven’t had to clean the tank yet. But I would do it like I do our other holding tanks.
      We haven’t had the water analyzed. I’m pretty confident it has soap still in the water. It doesn’t come out sudsy. But it’s really difficult to remove soap without a big filter system. This loop that we designed was an attempt to be a little better than the ones that simply recirculate your shower water without filtering. It works great for our needs. But if you want it to some out more like potable water, you would need a much bigger sediment filter.
      I haven’t tried magnesium salt. There are a few things on my list to test out. I just haven’t gotten the chance yet. We did use the system a lot when we were in Utah hiking everyday. It worked great.
      Check out showerloop.org. From what I understand, that’s the origin of the filtered loop idea.

  • @theperpetualadventuremachi4571

    Awesome info! We have a similar setup and just cannot get rid of the soap. We have since purged it and are considering using it just as a rinse in between "real" showers. We are so frustrated with the soap. If you (or anyone else out there) know a way, please share.

    • @ryanandsu
      @ryanandsu  Před 3 lety +1

      Check out showerloop.org. His design uses a sand and charcoal filter and does a better job with the soap.

    • @billnalen
      @billnalen Před 2 lety +1

      I ditched my recirculating shower for the same reason. Tried all different filter combinations and water additives (like the original Hour Shower guys used). Either water still has soap, or the filters clog after 2 showers. Ended up not being worth the hassle so I took everything out.

  • @emanuelunglaube7585
    @emanuelunglaube7585 Před 3 lety +1

    Awesome job. I've been planning on building something like that for years. How did you realise the switching between regular use with fresh water and the circle? So how do you switch between the two sinks? Do you have some sort of valve for that too?

    • @ryanandsu
      @ryanandsu  Před 3 lety +3

      We are using electronic ball valves. The ones we have will take a 12v current and open. Then you reverse the polarity and it closes. So we can close the fresh and open the recirculating and vice versa. In the floor we put in two drains. One goes to the grey tank and one to the recirculating holding tank. We then just use a tub drain stopper to close off whichever we aren’t using. We didn’t want to use a three way valve or anything like that because of the possibility of failure under the shower floor. Trying to get to it to fix it just seemed like a nightmare.

    • @emanuelunglaube7585
      @emanuelunglaube7585 Před 3 lety

      Thanks for the quick response, you guys are awesome.

  • @earthpeace3323
    @earthpeace3323 Před 3 lety +1

    Very nice and informative.
    How clean is the water? How many times do you shower with the recirculating water before replacing it with clean fresh water?

    • @ryanandsu
      @ryanandsu  Před 3 lety +1

      We used it for a week when we camped in Zion. It worked really well. It comes out like cleaned bath water. It wasn’t crystal clean as the soap doesn’t come fully out. But it works great as a camp shower. I built it so we can flush the tanks and fill with clean water whenever we want. Check out the CZcams channel Snow & Curt. Their system is very similar. They say they use it for about a week at a time.

  • @danielavenson6964
    @danielavenson6964 Před 2 lety +1

    Love the system. Just a little confused on the hot water side of things. Are you basically heating up your entire freshwater supply to run through the heat exchanger?

    • @ryanandsu
      @ryanandsu  Před 2 lety +1

      Yes. We heat the hot water tank for our fresh water system. It's 120v and Propane powered. It didn't make sense to install another heating element when we already had one installed. So we heat the water tank (which is usually heated already anyway) and pass that water through the heat exchanger and then back into the cold inlet for the water heater tank. So it's setup like a household hot water loop to get hot water to the back of the house. Also, having it powered by our 120v hot water heater means that we can heat it off of our solar system (pulls about 1400watts) and then we also have hot water for things like dishes, etc.

  • @Deltro61
    @Deltro61 Před rokem

    I've been looking at the systems and the one main question I have is what you are using for a hot water source? People talk about these 20 minute long showers, and if you're hooked up to a standard say 6 gallon or 10 gallon RV hot water tank, it would seem to me it would be impossible to keep up using a heat exchanger. Perhaps because the water is circulated the heat loss is not significant enough and you can go 20 minutes or an indefinite amount of time, but I would like to know what the minimum requirement is for a hot water tank size for say a 15 minute long shower? I've considered going with the on-demand type units, but to provide a sufficient buffer I would think you would have to use a much larger reserve tank (5 to 7 gallons). I think I'd prefer just to use one and a half to two gallons, and just dump it after use. I could even see shampooing using a military style shower, and doing a quick rinse to get rid of most of the dirt off your body during that same period. Then put things into a recirculating mode, and just enjoy the hot water without putting a lot of demands on the filtration system. Seems like the petroleum based soaps are the biggest killer, so again, I'd like to avoid putting them through the filtration system at all if possible. Let me know your thoughts for tank size. I have no idea of the heat loss and what is needed.

  • @OUTDOORDUDE
    @OUTDOORDUDE Před 2 lety

    Question: How is your heat exchanger powered? In other words, do you get the energy created from propane or electricity? I love that you succeeded , congratulation.

    • @ryanandsu
      @ryanandsu  Před 2 lety +1

      The heat exchanger itself is passive. It is not powered. It’s heated by our water heater. It’s a 6 gallon RV water heater that can be heated by both propane or electric.

  • @cj2467
    @cj2467 Před rokem

    Any problems with outside lines freezing up in cold weather?

  • @naughtysquirrelontheroad1542

    Thanks 😁 how are you hearing the water that goes to the heat exchanger?

    • @ryanandsu
      @ryanandsu  Před 2 lety

      We are using the hot water heater that is already in the RV. We hooked up a hot water loop like you would have in a house to get instant hot water at the back of the house. It pulls from the hot water line and passes through the heat exchanger, and then puts the warm water back into the cold line to go back into the water heater tank.

  • @allywilkeforsenate
    @allywilkeforsenate Před rokem

    What about filtering out the soap?

  • @DormantIdeasNIQ
    @DormantIdeasNIQ Před 2 lety +1

    SUBSCRIBED & LIKED: I'd have to watch this video many times to get it all...
    I did not see how you actually keep the fresh water and the shower water separate.
    If not then you need to add a back-flow-preventer unit.
    Yes there are tons of information online, but no one video covers it all.
    ...some people are saying it worth having it, but expect intensive/daily/weekly/replacing of filters cycle maintenance.
    Some use 1 gal, 3.5 gal, you seem to use 5 gals(not really clear per your video since you keep fresh water coming into your shower water tank).
    I suppose your push button sets all the check-valves as needed to create a loop or not!
    Anyhow, t.y. for the post, the graph is a good base to visualize this system.
    If your ARDUINO side of the equation fails, you go shower-less... LOL
    Are these electronic valves manual as well !?

    • @ryanandsu
      @ryanandsu  Před 2 lety

      Yeah. If it fails, we are sunk. But, we could just connect 12v to the valves to open/close them. We haven’t had to use it much. But the times we have, it was nice. If I knew how we would travel back when we built this, we probably wouldn’t have built it. It was more of an experiment for me. :)

  • @sjf67gto
    @sjf67gto Před 2 lety +2

    If you could make a schematic and an updated line diagram so people can follow what you did that would be nice even better if you videotape the build just make a video with the how you put things together

    • @ryanandsu
      @ryanandsu  Před 2 lety +2

      I’m trying to get my act together and get that done. We have kind of settled for a bit and aren’t traveling during the holidays. So it’s one of my projects to do.

  • @vicenteespinoza1997
    @vicenteespinoza1997 Před 2 lety

    Does your filters filter out soap??? I use dove soap bars and it really don’t filter out the soap.

  • @Eec2023
    @Eec2023 Před rokem

    Did you need to replace the water pump to get more pressure to get through all those filters?

  • @YorumcuKorumcu
    @YorumcuKorumcu Před 2 lety

    I think uv light can’t kill bacteria in that system . Because uv light needs time its about 30sec up to 30 minutes to do sterilisation , it’s dependent on power of bulb. I can offer you maybe you can search ozone generator or Sodium Hypochlorous Acid Generator for water sterilisation but first you need a collect water in a tank for sterilisation before use it.

    • @YorumcuKorumcu
      @YorumcuKorumcu Před 2 lety

      If bacteria staying and hiding back side of the dirty particulars UV light never reach that area. That is the reason UV light useless for water sterilisation

  • @Falsetto2002
    @Falsetto2002 Před rokem

    Aloha Ryan,
    Do you have a book or ebook that provides instructions to build a system like yours?

  • @ivetteromanroberto
    @ivetteromanroberto Před 3 lety

    What type of soap works for the recirculating water shower? Would the stainless steel soap bar be an effective substitute?

    • @ryanandsu
      @ryanandsu  Před 3 lety

      I’m not sure. Soap is really tough to filter out. This system does a good job of getting some cleaned up bath water. I’m not sure if anyone has been able to do much better because of the nature of soap. But it’s be interesting to try some different stuff and see how it filters out.

  • @tmaclax013
    @tmaclax013 Před 2 lety

    Hi there, awesome video! I actually purchased one of those electric ball valves a while ago when I first started thinking about setting up a recirculating shower. My one question is the hot-fresh water that flows through the heat exchanger, how does that flow back to the fresh water holding tank? In my camper all the water flows through the pump so I don't know how the hot water could flow from the hot side shower supply lines, through the cold water lines, through the pump and back into the fresh water tank.

    • @ryanandsu
      @ryanandsu  Před 2 lety +1

      It’s a closed loop on the fresh water. So the recirculating never crosses into the clean loop. We used a check valve after the water goes through the heat exchanger on the hot water fresh line and connected it to the cold line. So the recirculating pump causes the a pressure drop on the cold intake and pulls the water from the heat exchanger back into the cold input of the water heater. Hopefully that makes sense. It’s essentially a hot water loop like you’d install in a house.

    • @hermanfrederick793
      @hermanfrederick793 Před rokem

      @@ryanandsu is there a parts source list?

    • @ryanandsu
      @ryanandsu  Před rokem

      @@hermanfrederick793 We didn't put together a parts list to post. But we did post a bunch of the parts with links to where we bought them in the description of the video. The problem is that they were sourced off of Amazon and we bought them back a while ago. So the vendors may or may not still exist online. There is another CZcams Channel that has a lot of good information about how to build a system like this. It's where we got most of our info for parts.
      czcams.com/video/L0AR4COFJng/video.html
      czcams.com/video/sf17f_ByIHM/video.html
      They have parts listed in their descriptions as well. Hopefully that helps.

  • @user-xj5ts6hk3c
    @user-xj5ts6hk3c Před 8 měsíci

    I need help creating the same thing in my fifth wheel, recirculating my grey water and then rerouting it to existing fresh water tank. Is that possible. Please let me know thank you so much

  • @philconway9881
    @philconway9881 Před 3 lety +1

    Thats awsome!! How long did it take?

    • @ryanandsu
      @ryanandsu  Před 3 lety

      It took us a few days to run the plumbing. A couple of months total to finish our full bathroom remodel.

  • @loveu2222
    @loveu2222 Před 3 lety

    What about if you have to add cold water to rich a right temp, where's the extra water goes?

    • @ryanandsu
      @ryanandsu  Před 3 lety +1

      I have it setup so we can drain the recirculating holding tank into our main rv grey water tank.

  • @mikecreativision
    @mikecreativision Před 3 lety +1

    Excellent! These are almost exactly my thoughts designing my future recirculating shower. How did you solve the problem that water gets warmer and warmer over time?

    • @ryanandsu
      @ryanandsu  Před 3 lety +1

      You do need to make adjustment as you shower. That part can be annoying. And I know there are systems people have designed to keep the water at a constant temperate. I just didn’t want to over complicate it any more than we did. It’s just a minor inconvenience to adjust from time to time

    • @mikecreativision
      @mikecreativision Před 3 lety

      @@ryanandsu Yes, a constant temperature would be kind of important for me and it gives me some serious headaches how to overcome this problem. Do you have any references to the designs you mentioned that solve this temperature problem that i can review?

    • @ryanvesely9758
      @ryanvesely9758 Před 3 lety

      This video is one I looked at that he seems to address that issue.
      czcams.com/video/SPc4qp3m5Ok/video.html

    • @inchvans8296
      @inchvans8296 Před 3 lety +2

      mikeskier you can get a thermostatic mixing valve that automatically adjusts cold and warm water flow to keep temps constant.

    • @mrjjman2010
      @mrjjman2010 Před 3 lety

      @@ryanandsu use a thermostatic valve and set it at the warmest you want the water to be, then it will basically do that for you. There are a lot of cheap ones but they’re not too pricey for a nice one, I think mine was like 90$.

  • @hotjavalava
    @hotjavalava Před 2 lety

    how is your system handling soap and shampoo?

  • @Rain.Mippet
    @Rain.Mippet Před 11 měsíci

    what pump did you use I cant find it in the description and there is a lot of various SEA pumps that look alike?

    • @Rain.Mippet
      @Rain.Mippet Před 11 měsíci

      also the two pre-filters I believe are missing from the description unless I'm reading it wrong

  • @psychedelicponcho9090
    @psychedelicponcho9090 Před 3 lety +5

    do you have any issues with soap still being in the water as its coming out???i installed a recirc shower and it doesnt seem to be removing the soap

    • @ryanandsu
      @ryanandsu  Před 3 lety +2

      Not that I’ve noticed. It’s been doing a good job scrubbing the water. From what I understand, the activated charcoal filter is a good water scrubber. It’s also why it’s near the end of the chain to finish clarifying the water.

    • @inchvans8296
      @inchvans8296 Před 3 lety +2

      Donnie!!!!! What up dude!! I was wondering if I would see you in one of these comment sections.

  • @pvesely299
    @pvesely299 Před 3 lety +1

    How long before you have to clean or exchange filters?

    • @ryanandsu
      @ryanandsu  Před 3 lety +3

      We haven’t had to change out the filters yet. I clean the pre filter about once a week. From what I could find online, we should get about 6 months out of them.

  • @Lilwolf2000
    @Lilwolf2000 Před 2 lety

    I think the link for the active carbon filter is a duplicate of the 5 micron filter. Curious which filter you used. And I'm assuming you bought 3 of the big blue filters... and then found different filters for each. (also the 20 mil filter and prefilter? assuming the pre is just one of the small screen filters). Thanks!

    • @ryanandsu
      @ryanandsu  Před 2 lety

      Yes. I bought three of the blue ones and just use different filters in each. The companies that sell the filters keep changing their products around. We use a 20 micron pleated filter, then a 5 or 10 micro pleated filter (depending on what we can find), then a 5 micron charcoal filter. But it’s been hard to find on Amazon lately. The pre filter is a pre sediment filter like this. amzn.to/3k24YeX
      The one we bought is not on Amazon anymore. I’ll have to go through and update the links. I didn’t realize how many products have vanished in such a short amount of time.

  • @vincentwade1
    @vincentwade1 Před rokem

    So, this system only lets you use the "two gallons of water" for a long water saving shower, but it cannot actually recycle the water for a long term, such as for a several showers a week. The filters will eventually mold and the water starts to stink due to the soap that is dissolved in the grey water. Because of the bio-waste and the stuff in soap that feed bacteria, you'd have to replace those filters quite often, would you not?