Bob,
The process you describe requires the gray tank to be full and the black tank a lot less than full. For us with our 2350 with 23g/35b tanks, the black tank is less than 1/4 full at the time I blend them. It is process I usually do but one time before dumping to buy some time. A few times I blended the tanks twice but the second time buys very little extra time.
If you are camping often in primitive campsites, some such places permit gray water dumped on-site in the bushes. Then open the gray valve and gravity drain through the macerator hose. It is a very slow process that takes over-night.
Thanks Ron! I have to admit that the term "blend" makes me cringe - I obviously don't want to blend the black and grey water. Using your example of a full grey and less than 1/4 full black, when do you close the grey valve? Does the grey empty completely, or does it stop emptying when the grey tank level is even with the black tank level. I should have paid more attention in physics class!
This is the process I follow with our older 2007 2350 design with 1st generation macerator.
Starting out with the gray tank full and the black tank roughly 1/8 full.......
1) Open gray tank valve. This floods the length of pipe between the two tank valves along with flooding the macerator.
2) Open black tank valve. The rush of gray water into the black tank, can be heard. It takes only 5 to 10 seconds for the two tanks to balance/level out.
3) Close both tank valves. The closing sequence really does not matter, but do so immediately.
4) How much remains in the gray tank after blending depends on how full the black tank was prior to the process. In our case, because we use community toilets when it is convenient, and we don't go #2 in our toilet, our black tank normally has very little waste water generated through toilet usage. So we drain a lot of gray water into the black tank.
A benefit to the tank-blending process is that you introduce a whole lot of soapy water into the black tank which helps to keep that tank cleaner, simply better black tank maintenance.
The two tanks are roughly the same elevation, so all you are doing is leveling out the waste water between them. As you can imagine, the results can vary a lot.
This tank blending process was explained to me from Phoenix employee John Putman in June of 2007 while doing the final walk-through, the day we picked up our brand new PC at the factory in Elkhart. I have been doing this for nearly 15 years.