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noah
 
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Default Fresh water system- a question for Peggy, (and others).

On Mon, 4 Aug 2003 18:40:43 -0500, "Keith"
wrote:

I did the whole shootin' match about three times now. Scrubbed the tank,
flushed it out, filled with bleach solution and ran it through all the lines
and let sit about 6 hrs., then pumped the tanks out, filled with FW and
flushed the lines. The odor comes back within a week or so with the fresh
water. I'm guessing the black rubber hose maybe contaminated and
non-responsive to the bleach treatment. I guess I'll replace it and see if
that helps.


I think you have the right idea. Follow Peggies advice and replace
the lines with "non-clear" tubing.

Also, the chlorine in domestic (shore supply) will evaporate or be
used up after a while. If you don't use it frequently, you may still
need to add a bit of chlorine from time to time.
Good luck,
noah

Courtesy of Lee Yeaton,
See the boats of rec.boats
www.TheBayGuide.com/rec.boats
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Peggie Hall
 
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Default Fresh water system- a question for Peggy, (and others).

noah wrote:

Also, the chlorine in domestic (shore supply) will evaporate or be
used up after a while. If you don't use it frequently, you may still
need to add a bit of chlorine from time to time.


Not the best idea, Noah. Only the purifying properties in chlorine
evaporate...the corrosive properties remain behind. Any added chlorine
will only do the same thing...so adding more only shortens the life of
water pumps and aluminum water tanks. An annual "shock
treatment"--provided it's complete flushed out after it's been in the
system long enough to do its job--won't harm anything...it's the
cumulative effect of small amounts of chlorine that do the damage. An
annual--or at most semi-annual in a tropical or sub-tropical
climate--recommissioning should be all that's needed to keep the onboard
water smelling and tasting as good as any that comes out of a faucet on
land if it's just replaced frequently. If what comes out of the faucets
on land isn't good enough to suit you, install a filter. Just remember,
though, that filters do need periodic cleaning and/or replacment...and
that they should only be used in addition, not as a substitute for,
system maintenance.

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://www.seaworthy.com/html/get_ri...oat_odors.html

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noah
 
Posts: n/a
Default Fresh water system- a question for Peggy, (and others).

On Tue, 05 Aug 2003 01:13:23 GMT, Peggie Hall
wrote:

noah wrote:

Also, the chlorine in domestic (shore supply) will evaporate or be
used up after a while. If you don't use it frequently, you may still
need to add a bit of chlorine from time to time.


Not the best idea, Noah. Only the purifying properties in chlorine
evaporate...the corrosive properties remain behind. Any added chlorine
will only do the same thing...so adding more only shortens the life of
water pumps and aluminum water tanks. An annual "shock
treatment"--provided it's complete flushed out after it's been in the
system long enough to do its job--won't harm anything...it's the
cumulative effect of small amounts of chlorine that do the damage. An
annual--or at most semi-annual in a tropical or sub-tropical
climate--recommissioning should be all that's needed to keep the onboard
water smelling and tasting as good as any that comes out of a faucet on
land if it's just replaced frequently. If what comes out of the faucets
on land isn't good enough to suit you, install a filter. Just remember,
though, that filters do need periodic cleaning and/or replacment...and
that they should only be used in addition, not as a substitute for,
system maintenance.

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://www.seaworthy.com/html/get_ri...oat_odors.html



....er...uhm...that's what I meant. )
noah

Courtesy of Lee Yeaton,
See the boats of rec.boats
www.TheBayGuide.com/rec.boats
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