If you're having trouble smelling the chlorine and add red dye to the water, how whould you know if what you're seeing is "cholorinated water" or "RV antifreeze" ??? Not that you'd want to drink either, but disposal and cleanup would be significantly different for the two. If you do add a dye to the water, I'd recommend blue or green or yellow, not red for that reason....
But, like posted, if you use city water to flush antifreeze out of the lines, then add a "measured amount of chlorine bleach to the tank and fill with the "best guess volume" to match the tank capacity, then after running each faucet for a "best guess time", you should feel reasonably sure that you've got chlorine in each of the lines. Don't forget to fill the water tank with chlorinated water as well, or you won't be pushing chlorinated water through the hot water side of the faucets.
__________________
John
2015 F250 6.7l 4x4
2014 Cougar X Lite 27RKS
|