Hmmmm...
Link worked for me. Try it again: http://www.gelair.com The site is being rebuilt, but the parts that explain how the stuff works was still working last night.The HVAC industry has quite a few products that can do the job on boats. I've seen everything from solvents that'll "unfreeze" any metal valve to coatings for metal condesate pans to the stuff I recommended above. So y'all might want to get spend some time prowling the shelves in a local major distributor's showrooom. Wholesalers are more likely to have showrooms than retail contractors, and they may not be able to sell direct to you...but they'll be glad to refer you to an HVAC contractor who'll order anything you want for you for next day pick-up. Even though you'll have to pay "retail," HVAC retail is at least half the price of anything labeled "marine." I did have second thoughts about what might be causing the odor in "captain's" ac system. Onboard heat/ac systems draw their air from the bilge...and a wet dirty bilge is a primordial soup that stinks. So the FIRST thing I'd do is clean the bilge...really CLEAN it and then flush all the dirty water out with plenty of clean fresh water, instead of just dumping in more bilge cleaner and/or bleach and letting the bilge pumps do the rest. Would you just dump some more detergent into a sinkful of dirty dishwater, pull the plug and expect to have a clean sink? Then why would expect to have a clean bilge if all you do is dump in some bilge cleaner and do nothing more than "pull the plug?" Really CLEAN your bilge and you may get rid of the odor in your heat/ac system without any other help. If that doesn't work, the problem is in your ductwork...the stuff I recommended will take care of it.