Captain Goddammit wrote:I carry one as an emergency spare if ALL else fails but they really suck.
oneeyeddick wrote:$24 at harbor freight gets you a decent 12v pump with garden hose connections on each end, and jumper style clips on the end for connecting to a car or marine battery.
This pump will easily do the job and work for many years.
Attach a diswasher spray head to the end of your hose to create pressure enough to properly wash your hair, and to conserve water by not running continuously.
oneeyeddick wrote:$24 at harbor freight gets you a decent 12v pump with garden hose connections on each end, and jumper style clips on the end for connecting to a car or marine battery.
This pump will easily do the job and work for many years.
Attach a diswasher spray head to the end of your hose to create pressure enough to properly wash your hair, and to conserve water by not running continuously.
You could at that point just do it in the evap pond, then wash feet separate when you get out
oneeyeddick wrote:$24 at harbor freight gets you a decent 12v pump with garden hose connections on each end, and jumper style clips on the end for connecting to a car or marine battery.
This pump will easily do the job and work for many years.
Attach a diswasher spray head to the end of your hose to create pressure enough to properly wash your hair, and to conserve water by not running continuously.
Captain Goddammit wrote:oneeyeddick wrote:$24 at harbor freight gets you a decent 12v pump with garden hose connections on each end, and jumper style clips on the end for connecting to a car or marine battery.
This pump will easily do the job and work for many years.
Attach a diswasher spray head to the end of your hose to create pressure enough to properly wash your hair, and to conserve water by not running continuously.
That's not necessarily a great idea, an RV water pump would be a lot better because it's a diaphragm-type pump designed to build pressure. Most of those other pumps aren't happy when the flow is restricted or totally blocked. There's a reason all RVs use the type of pump they do.
And, RV pumps also have automatic shut-off switches. They run when they need to and stop when there's no water being used. They cost a bit new but old RVs are everywhere, you shouldn't have too hard a time
scoring one.
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