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Head and Sink Drain
rhys wrote:
I've done this on my Great Lakes boat with no problem. I have (from the hull up) a seacock, a six inch piece of marine hose (double clamped both ends) a reducing T-fitting to a 3/4" water intake to the head (just below the waterline and double SS-hose clamped) about a 12 inch length of double SS-hose clamped marine hose a plastic ballcock with appropriate barbs a short length of clamped hose going into the drain pipe (about 10 inches) of the head sink. Methodology is as follows: Normally, both seacock on hull and the plastic ball valve are CLOSED. When I want to use the head, I reach into the space beneath the sink and open the seacock. The hoses fill with water, slightly under pressure as the entrance is about 18 inches beneath the waterline. I use an old Brydon manual head that's about kaput, but it works for the light duty I subject it to. When finished, I flush to a 30 gallon holding tank. I close the seacock. To empty the sink, I simply open both the plastic ball valve and the seacock. Grey water leaves the boat. I suppose a smidgen might get into the head intake pipe, but visually, at least, this is not an issue. No problems in three years with this, except for a visit to the Travelift when the seacock split due to "failure to winterize properly" by me. If Peggie says this is OK, feel free to swipe this "design". Works ok for me. Obviously, an offshore set-up would be simpler, but I flush WITH the lake, not INTO the lake G. Actually, you don't have a choice...it's illegal to flush directly overboard--or dump a tank--in any US and most Canadian inland waters including the Great Lakes. You must be out to sea at least 3 miles from the nearest point on the whole US coastline to legally do either. The only thing at issue, though, is where the DISCHARGE from the toilet goes...the flush water source doesn't matter. So there's no need to "secure" an intake thru-hull in any waters, only any overboard discharge thru-hulls and/or y-valves coming OUT of a toilet or tank. -- 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://69.20.93.241/store/customer/p...40&cat=&page=1 |
Head and Sink Drain
On Fri, 02 Jul 2004 19:57:45 GMT, Peggie Hall
wrote: Works ok for me. Glad to hear it...it's the sort of "brainwave" you don't want to have bite you aftwards down the line. snip The only thing at issue, though, is where the DISCHARGE from the toilet goes...the flush water source doesn't matter. So there's no need to "secure" an intake thru-hull in any waters, only any overboard discharge thru-hulls and/or y-valves coming OUT of a toilet or tank. Just the deck fitting and the vent...sorry, spider nursery... R. |
Head and Sink Drain
On Sun, 04 Jul 2004 17:23:44 -0400, rhys wrote:
On Fri, 02 Jul 2004 19:57:45 GMT, Peggie Hall wrote: Works ok for me. Glad to hear it...it's the sort of "brainwave" you don't want to have bite you aftwards down the line. snip The only thing at issue, though, is where the DISCHARGE from the toilet goes...the flush water source doesn't matter. So there's no need to "secure" an intake thru-hull in any waters, only any overboard discharge thru-hulls and/or y-valves coming OUT of a toilet or tank. This was the question I had. And if I understand it, I can yank 10 feet of hose; git rid of a cluster fouled up valve configuration; and have a leaner-meaner system....and solve it with a nylon wire-tie. I owe my allegiance to the Dunny Queen. I just wish there were a better title. |
Head and Sink Drain
Horace Brownbag wrote:
I owe my allegiance to the Dunny Queen. I just wish there were a better title. There is. A writer named Sandy Lindsey interviewed me for a magazine article several years ago...in it, she gave me the title "Head Mistress." It was such a major improvement on every other title I'd been given that I immediately adopted it as my username on all the forums in which I'm the resident plumber. -- 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://69.20.93.241/store/customer/p...40&cat=&page=1 |
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