I'm always interested in designs for improving the utility of an overland vehicle (or trailer) at the campsite. I designed the Trail Kitchen specifically because I didn't think the vehicle kitchen systems at the time were functional enough, compact enough or affordable enough and luckily MORryde agreed and picked up the design.
Now I'm doing several small design projects for Tentrax trailers (
https://www.tentrax.com/), one of which involves a tabletop that clips on to the side MOLLE panels I designed for them a few years ago. The tabletop will have a provision for a collapsible sink. As part of that project they sent me a Dometic Faucet and "Hydration Water Jug"; they would like the faucet to work with the tabletop/collapsible sink I'm doing for them.
The faucet has a magnetic base and is powered through a USB connection. I haven't tested it yet but I can easily test it with the MORryde Trail Kitchen - the Trail Kitchen power panel has two USB outputs.
The faucet comes with a silicone hose that has a quick-connect fitting on the end. That connector matches a quick-connect fitting on top of the jug. The jug holds 11 liters, which is just under 3 gallons, a pretty good amount of water for a camp sink.
Tentrax hasn't asked me to integrate the "jug" into the project, but I'll see how I can work it in. I'm used to using Rotopax containers with the Trail Kitchen and they work very well and the slim size of the Rotopax is easy to store in, outside or on the Tentrax trailer or a Jeep. I'm not sure where I'd store the jug on a Jeep, and even less sure where I'd put it on/in the compact Tentrax trailer. The jug violates one of my prime rules of design for Jeep/overland accessories - don't make anything arbitrarily different if there's a standard or convention that could dictate the design. Here's what I mean - jerry can carriers of many types are very common in the Jeep, overland and camping worlds. Does the jug fit in a jerry can carrier?
Sort of, but it's a tight fit, in the photo above it's at an angle because I haven't forced it down into the Blitz tray. It does fit, but tightly. And it's not as wide as a jerry can. So you could carry it in a jerry can carrier like the Blitz, but it's arbitrarily different. If I were designing the jug, I'd either make it more compatible with the size of a jerry can, or perhaps make it more like a Rotopax, because there are lots of solutions for those. But Dometic didn't ask me
.
It isn't important for the Tentrax project, but I may swap the Dometic quick-connect fitting on the faucet for one compatible with the MORryde Trail Kitchen sink option, that way if I like the faucet I can use it with the Trail Kitchen.
After receiving the Dometic items, I suggested to Tentrax that they offer a Rotopax adapter for the faucet - many Tentrax trailer owners have already implemented Rotopax mounts on their trailers, so if the Dometic faucet was plug-compatible with a Rotopax it might make sense for those people. The quick-connect fitting Dometic uses on the faucet is commercially available, and MORryde already makes a Rotopax adapter, so all of the necessary parts to adapt the Dometic faucet to a Rotopax already exist, no new engineering necessary.
If anyone has used these Dometic products, let me know what you think of them. Maybe you'll have ideas that I can adapt into this project.
Tentrax has also asked me to design weather-resistant storage bags to mount on the MOLLE panels on the outside of the trailer. I didn't expect my prototype work a few weeks ago on the theft-resistant/weather-resistant bags to be useful so soon, but I'll be doing a variation of that design work adapted to the size and shape of the trailer MOLLE panels. I'll post more about that once I sew a prototype.