History note, my experience. The H-34 has a very shallow bilge and they were supplied from Hunter with a centrifugal Rule 2000 GPH (nominal) and a 1 1/8" check valve in the discharge line. The discharge line is about 12 feet long with a rise of about 5 feet and exits just under the toe rail. Should the check valve leak, the volume in the hose is such that it will fill the bilge enough to trigger the float switch . Not optimal but I have had one leaking valve problem in the 31 years that I've owned the boat. That problem was a piece of insulation stripped from an 18 gauge wire.. The little bit of insulation stuck in the valve seat and caused a slow backflow. I cleaned the valve and returned it to service. I generally keep a clean bilge but not dry. The dehumidifier runs all the time (no off season here) so there is condensate water (almost distilled, fresh) that is always there .. The pump and check are original to the boat so they have been in service for 37 years. Yes I carry a spare pump, check valve, and float switch. What I have works OK for me.
I understand the concern about the check valve, but most diaphragm pumps have a discharge check valve in them to allow them to function. That valve is quite small compared to a 1 1/8" valve and can be fouled much easier; note that many of the diaphragm pumps come with a strainer.. The centrifugals typically have a strainer built into the base and can pass debris much larger than would be passable through the diaphragm pump discharge valve. There are some kinds of bilge pumps that kinda work without a check of any kind, but they are typically more expensive and typically less efficient than centrifugal or diaphragm types. My buddy's older Tartan 37 had a flex rubber impeller type bilge pump (like a raw water pump on the engine) that dried the bilge well and prevented backflow. Something like this
1/10 HP Transfer Pump 320 GPH (harborfreight.com)
Not saying that one, something like that.. could be used to eliminate a bilge pump check valve. It is a flex rubber impeller type pump.
My 2.6 cents worth.. (2 cents plus our current 30% inflation rate on many things.)