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Calif Bill
 
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It means the seacock is either 4-5" under water or the pressure equalized in
the hose. The seacock should have been closed before pulling the hose.
That is their function in life. Change it if it is plastic and can not
move. If bronze, fix and clean.

"Falky foo" wrote in message
.. .
Hi, I've been fiddling around with one of my seacocks. I've never fiddled
with them before. It's the one that the sink drains through. Anyhow it's
old and could use replacing, but I can't really afford that. So I went to
replace the plastic tube that the sink drains down through into the

seacock
through the hull because it was old and nasty, and when I took the tube

off
the seacock water stared gushing up through it. I put the tube back on

and
the water filled the tube about 4-5 inches and then it stopped. So it

seems
that 4-5 inches of water is nessary to keep the through-hull from letting
water in. Is this normal? Because if so it means that the little metal
bands holding the drain tubes on to the seacocks are the only thing
preventing the boat from sinking, and that seems a little scary.

Thoughts?





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