M
Mal Leichter
I own older Tartan and when I purchased it the previous owner said the head worked but had a few problems. We never really used it much until this year when we went on a 2 week cruising vacation.The head seemed ok until a few days into the cruise. At that time I noticed that we would use the head and pump it dry. Afew minutes later there would be liquid back in the bowl. This didn't happen every time we used it but most of the time. Sometimes the liquid looke like plain water, sometimes like urine, and sometimes like waste from the tank. We tried Closing ALL the valves after using the head and leaving the head on "dry" and even theh there would be liguid in the bowl after a few minutes sometimes.I admitt I don't know much about what a broper installation should look like but seems to me this shouldn't be happening.As best as I can tell the sea water comes in the through hull and seacock and goes right to the head. The current head is a manual "Headmate". Looks to me like the waste line goes from the base if the toilet to a "Y" valve then either to the tank or directly out through the waste seacock. The tank is a 6 gallon tank mounted under the V birth on the port side in the bow. I see an atmospheric vent very high on the bow which I assume comes from the waste tank but it could be from the fuel tank that is located further astern on the port side.I am considering just ripping everything out and starting again but I haven been able to find a book that diagrams a complete and properly installed system. I have several questions:1. The Tank Can the waste tank be mounted higher than the the bowl. If so is there a check valve in the tank or is there a special valve or devise that needs to be installed into the waste line to prevent flow from the tank back to the bowl???2. Should the waste line have a vented loop installed in it3. Should the supply Line have a vented loop???4. Is there a book or article somewhere that diagrams or explains a well installed systemThanks in advance for all assistanceMal Leichter