I have a 2009 49, on my electric blige pump discharge there is a one way valve is this a factory install or did the previous owner put it on.
Do you have the Johnson pump (red), or white pump?I have a 2009 49, on my electric blige pump discharge there is a one way valve is this a factory install or did the previous owner put it on.
Probably the first day I took delivery of my 49 I ditched the 'T' in the sink drain.does your galley sink drain run slow, I cleaned the hoses out and it still drains slow. The two sinks our connected by a tee not a Y, I thought this might be part of the problem.
Your're wrong.Check valves have absolutely no negative affect on the bilge pump. Pumping water is based on head which is the total vertical rise you are pumping the water. The head is the same weather you have a check valve or not.
Without the check valve you would have the pump turn on based on the float switch and pump water until the float went down, shutting off the pump. The water in the house, in the case of a Catalina 310 about 1 gallon, will then call back into the bilge, probably causing the pump to cycle back on.
Don't remove the check valve. Use Brass instead of plastic. And use a "flapper" style instead of a spring style. The flapper style has a clean out opening that can be removed so you can clean the flapper and the shelf it sits on.
By the way, just to give you a little credentials. I am an environmental consultant and manage construction for a major oil company. I probably pump over ten billion gallons of contaminated water each year. I have had to learn a lot about pumps over the 17 years I have been doing this.
I got rid of the y valveProbably the first day I took delivery of my 49 I ditched the 'T' in the sink drain.
You may have a air block in the line. I get this every year when I relaunch the boat. What I do is loosen the clamps at the sea-cock to let the air bleed out. That usually takes care of the issue. They do drain slow anyway do to the head pressure on the line.
Head is head for pumps. If it can pump the water out without a check valve then it can with. The pressure required to open the check valve is the same as the pressure required to push the water column without it.Your're wrong.
Can't tell you the number of boats I've been on where the check valve on a bilge pump caused it to fail.
It does so for 2 reasons:
The force on the check valve is greater than what the pump can generate to open the flapper when the entire pipe is filled with water.
This is mostly owing to boat builders fitting marginal bilge pumps.
As well, if you have a check valve, and you get an air lock between the pump and input to the check, the pump will not build up enough output pressure to break the check valve open.
This happens a lot with boat airco pumps as well, when they put a check in the output.
I'm sure you know a lot about pumps. But I've seen many instances where a check is mounted outside a pump where it will block the output.
Your probably right about that. I routed that vanity sink to the shower sump. But going directly overboard is probably a cleaner solution (excuse the pun). Using one of those Whale IC grey water pumps with two inputs would even be better (shower / Vanity sink)I got rid of the y valve
Put in a separate through hull for the aft head sink.
This is really the only proper solution I'm afraid.
JK none of this applies well to the crappy centrifugal pumps we use for bilge pumps. If you want to put one on a considerably more expensive diaphraghm pump, go ahead, but I would never advise a check valve on a Rule style pump, even to my worst enemy.Check valves have absolutely no negative affect on the bilge pump. Pumping water is based on head which is the total vertical rise you are pumping the water. The head is the same weather you have a check valve or not.
Without the check valve you would have the pump turn on based on the float switch and pump water until the float went down, shutting off the pump. The water in the house, in the case of a Catalina 310 about 1 gallon, will then call back into the bilge, probably causing the pump to cycle back on.
Don't remove the check valve. Use Brass instead of plastic. And use a "flapper" style instead of a spring style. The flapper style has a clean out opening that can be removed so you can clean the flapper and the shelf it sits on.
By the way, just to give you a little credentials. I am an environmental consultant and manage construction for a major oil company. I probably pump over ten billion gallons of contaminated water each year. I have had to learn a lot about pumps over the 17 years I have been doing this.
Just different applications. In theory the data you present is fine, and quite accurate, when the variables are met. In the real world it does not account for bilge chemicals, oil, etc. softening the seals, or the corrugated hose or low voltages, or elbows, reducers etc....They work in big industrial pumps, used to be a rep for Zoeller, but on boats they can be a true danger.Well, clearly I stand corrected.
This just shows that experience trumps all. And my experience with construction/industrial equipment is not as good as experience with marine applications.
Very disappointed to learn that Rule puts out false pump curves. Also I am disappointed that Catalina would put a check valve in with the information you have cited.
I am now making plans to rip out my Rule and replace it with something better. Any suggestions?
Thanks as always MS.
My original position, which was clearly backed up is that "stay away from check valves on bilge pumps"to the main question No
JK, I always assumed that Catalina put the check valve in the bilge pump circuit because it shares the outlet with the manual diaphragm pump. Without the check valve, the manual pump would be pumping water back into the bilge through the Rule pump. Does this make sense?Well, clearly I stand corrected.
This just shows that experience trumps all. And my experience with construction/industrial equipment is not as good as experience with marine applications.
Very disappointed to learn that Rule puts out false pump curves. Also I am disappointed that Catalina would put a check valve in with the information you have cited.
I am now making plans to rip out my Rule and replace it with something better. Any suggestions?
Thanks as always MS.