Fresh water flusing

Status
Not open for further replies.
E

Ed

Peggy, I have had boats with manual sea water heads (holding tank of course), and my last boat had two vacuflush heads. I liked the vacuflush - not so much for the mechanics of the system that seemed to be complex enough that a problem would someday be likely and the repair much harder than a manual. However, I LOVED the fresh water flushing aspect. Control of odors was easy, no eel grass stuck in the rim etc. Am considering a new boat and would like fresh water flushing. What is a quiet flush? Just a new name for a vacuflush? Would an electric toilet use fresh water or is it simply a macerator located at the bottom of the bowl and flushes with sea water? I assume I could always install a fresh water tank for the head if there is room, or is this fraught with problems? Thanks for any input.
 
Jun 4, 2004
292
Hunter 49 123
Jabsco Quit FLush

I have two 37045 series on my boat and there are not quiet. The main advantage is no pumping and mine use fresh water. They work great. Apparently they have diferent bowl sizes to fit your needs. Matias Yukiyu - h46
 
Oct 26, 2004
321
Macgregor 26X Denton Co. TX USA
fresh water, no chlorine

I'm not Peggy but have some experience. I have a 12 gallon fresh water tank hooked up to my Rariton PHII manual head. I use a small RV filter to remove the chlorine after it leaves the tank and before it gets to the head, and a one way valve to make sure toilet water cannot flow back into the filter or tank. Chlorine will deteriorate the rubber parts eventually, that's why I remove it. So far in seven years, no problems with original head parts doing normal maintenance.
 
Feb 4, 2005
524
Catalina C-30 Mattituck, NY
Use your Fresh Water Drain

You know what I did that was rather simple - I plumbed my sink drain to the intake line of the head with a "T" connector. I keep the seacock closed. After I am done with the head I use the sink....THEN flush - the water for the head pulls from the sink drain, fresh water. If I ran out of water or needed to drain a large amount of water in the sink I simply open the seacock. Good Luck - Rob
 
B

Bill O'Donovan

I'm not Peggy, either

But my solution is simplest of all. I long ago quit turning on the raw water intake for the commode and keep a gal of fresh water in the sink instead. No stink, pure water. Just fill it up at either sink, which by the way runs the taps which is always a good idea.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.