| Home |
| Search |
| Today's Posts |
|
|
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
|
Bingo! I just read your message to Bill and the light came on!
Thanks. Seahag (and to think I used to be a plumber...) Simple Simon wrote: There is only one solution to your problem. Get under there and install a trap or have your man do it. "Seahag" wrote: Donal wrote: "Seahag" wrote: It's slightly tolerable when we put a garden hose down it for 20 minutes, but this ain't right. Have you tried bleach? Yeah, among other things. It's a miracle I didn't kill the critters! |
|
#2
|
|||
|
|||
|
Doesn't your sink discharge over the side?
Cheers MC Seahag wrote: Bingo! I just read your message to Bill and the light came on! Thanks. Seahag (and to think I used to be a plumber...) Simple Simon wrote: There is only one solution to your problem. Get under there and install a trap or have your man do it. "Seahag" wrote: Donal wrote: "Seahag" wrote: It's slightly tolerable when we put a garden hose down it for 20 minutes, but this ain't right. Have you tried bleach? Yeah, among other things. It's a miracle I didn't kill the critters! |
|
#3
|
|||
|
|||
|
Yes it does, but a trap would ease the bend on the hose and hold a little
water so general smells wouldn't float back up to get'cha! Seahag The_navigator© wrote: Doesn't your sink discharge over the side? Cheers MC Seahag wrote: Bingo! I just read your message to Bill and the light came on! Thanks. Seahag (and to think I used to be a plumber...) Simple Simon wrote: There is only one solution to your problem. Get under there and install a trap or have your man do it. "Seahag" wrote: Donal wrote: "Seahag" wrote: It's slightly tolerable when we put a garden hose down it for 20 minutes, but this ain't right. Have you tried bleach? Yeah, among other things. It's a miracle I didn't kill the critters! |
|
#4
|
|||
|
|||
|
Seahag wrote:
Yes it does, but a trap would ease the bend on the hose and hold a little water so general smells wouldn't float back up to get'cha! No, a trap will form a nice environment for more smelly critters. There is no reason whatever to put a trap on any boat plumbing. DSK |
|
#5
|
|||
|
|||
|
DSK wrote:
Seahag wrote: Yes it does, but a trap would ease the bend on the hose and hold a little water so general smells wouldn't float back up to get'cha! No, a trap will form a nice environment for more smelly critters. There is no reason whatever to put a trap on any boat plumbing. DSK I think you could make an argument for a trap if you are using a holding tank, I'd rather have some of the nasty gasses that form in a holding tank choose to exit the system via an outboard vent than the interior sink drains. Cheers Marty |
|
#6
|
|||
|
|||
|
Martin Baxter wrote:
I think you could make an argument for a trap if you are using a holding tank, I'd rather have some of the nasty gasses that form in a holding tank choose to exit the system via an outboard vent than the interior sink drains. If you had a straight gravity flow into th eholding tank with no valves or anything, you could make a case for a trap. Personally I would think at least a check valve ought to be in there. DSK |
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Forum | |||
| Head and Sink Drain | Cruising | |||
| bathroom sink okay for melting lead? | Boat Building | |||
| The Bomb Under the Sink | General | |||
| The Bomb Under the Sink | Cruising | |||