Peggie,
I hear what your saying about the electric motor, but in reality it
doesn't seem to be true.
When we had the motor disconnected and pumped manually, then
reconnected, we carefully looked at the stroke length, and they are
almost identical whether pumping manually or with the motor. We were
all set to remove the motor and pump manually - we have no problem with
that. But, after carefully comparing the stroke lengths, it doesn't
seem to be any different. So, left the motor on.
Thanks again for all the advice.
Mike.
Peggie Hall wrote:
beaufortnc wrote:
Head problem solved.
Rebuilt entire head with kit from Raritan. Found the problem.
We had been using some of those cheap toilet fresheners that hang on
the side of the bowl - basically the same thing as the cakes that are
put in men's urinals.
Don't do that any more. Don't use ANY household or institutional
chemical bowl cleaner--or any other chemical household cleaning
products, either. They're all murderous to the rubber parts in toilets
and break down hose resistance to odor permeation.
All is working now. Only thing is I'm not sure if we put enough grease
in the cylinder area where the piston rides up and down.
If you were sparing with it, you prob'ly didn't. The whole tube in the
rebuild kit is supposed to go into the pump...not just a dab on each of
the o-rings etc. Take the pump off the base again and put the whole rest
of the tube into it...pump a few times to spread it all over the inside
of the cylinder. That's all the lubrication it should need for a year.
And you should do it again annually as preventive maintenance if you
don't want to rebuild the pump more often than every 5-6 years.
We cleaned it
all out very well, etc..., but with the new gasket, the pump is
difficult to cycle, but it works. (The old cylinder gasket was worn
completely smooth...
Possibly eaten away by the bowl "cakes."
Everything works, but we're maybe a little concerned that the
difficulty of the pumping action may stress the components too much. I
assume, however, that this is only temporary, and that the action will
eventually become easier.
It won't. Not till there's sufficient lubrication in the pump.
Putting a motor on a PH II pumps it with a much shorter and faster
stroke than slower more deliberate pumping manually. The shorter faster
stroke means it takes longer to prime...which means the rubber parts in
the pump are subjected to more dry friction, wearing 'em out MUCH faster
unless the pump is VERY well lubricated. The smartest thing you could do
is remove the motor...but you prob'ly won't. So you'd better make sure
there's plenty of thick teflon grease in the pump.
--
Peggie
----------
Peggie Hall
Specializing in marine sanitation since 1987
Author "Get Rid of Boat Odors - A Guide To Marine Sanitation Systems and
Other Sources of Aggravation and Odor"
http://shop.sailboatowners.com/books...ku=90&cat=1304