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Honest-Sugar-1492 t1_j802jo6 wrote

We put a 55 gallon drum on the roof of our outdoor shower enclosure to catch rain and my BIL put a solar panel with it to heat the water...worked great!

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LarixOcc t1_j806qts wrote

I've used a propane instant hot water shower fed off a stream. I don't know about the longevity for the unit. It seemed to get a bit of extra abuse being outside. Even covered it was rusting pretty good. As long as you have good pressure at the source.

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italy4242 t1_j807lh5 wrote

Oh I set one of these up, I could not get the damn thing to ignite. You also run into the issue of being wet and outside once you turn it off.

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Japslap t1_j8171le wrote

You can build an elevated platform for drainage. Essentially a pallet to stand on.

There are some primitive options for warm water but they require the right climate and site.

For example, you could simply elevate a vessel (like a 55 gallon drum) and use the sun to heat it. Fill the drum from your spigot in the morning or the night before. Paint it black, so it absorbs the most heat. It heats during the day, you use it at night.

You can then have 55 gallons of water each evening. Of course it is dependent on having sunlight exposure.

It doesn't have to be a drum, it could be a PVC piping network, or a large bladder.

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rededelk t1_j82f2ta wrote

Maybe consider a French drain

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darkerchef t1_j82kz37 wrote

I camp with a group that sets up 4 showers and a functioning kitchen(two hot water sinks, etc) for reenactment events. They use a propane version of on-demand water heaters, I think 3 total.

Their set up is pallets for the floor, 2” metal conduit for the framing, sump pits and drain lines to disperse the water, and the heaters are in a custom built, open front box for easy access. Works great, we feed and bathe ~150 people for 2 weeks that way.

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