stink from vent

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Oct 25, 2006
3
- - canada
When at suitable location where overboard discharge is permitted l have noticed foul odor coming from tank vent. How would this be possible?? it would be considered normal when dischargeing into the holding tank but when going direct overboard??
 
Dec 2, 1997
8,959
- - LIttle Rock
Most likely just due to the motion of the boat

Any rocking will push air in the tank out the vent. However, that air doesn't have to stink any time if the tank is managed correctly (aerobically). You might want to check out the link below to learn how to do that. Meanwhile, what (if anything) are you using in the tank?
 
B

Bob V

Raritan Products

That problem was cleared up on my boat when I started using 2 products made by Raritan. KO kills odors and CP cleans potties. The KO stuff works great. I used to think that CP was worthless until I started leaving it soak longer. Now I leave CP in the bowl when I am not using the boat and it works with no scrubbing. The next step is to get rid of the foul odor that comes the first time I flush after a few days of no use. That would be from the water that sits in the intake hose for days or weeks. Long term plan is to plumb in a bottle of KO to be taken up by siphon action directly into the intake line.
 
Dec 2, 1997
8,959
- - LIttle Rock
Odorlos is one of the best products...

But it MUST be used according to directions to work...and "regularly" and "according to directions" aren't necessarily the same. It must be added at least once a week...more often in especially hot weather. If you pump out or dump the tank at the end of a weekend aboard--last thing before the boat will sit--and only add Odorls immediately after emptying the tank, it will have exhausted itself by the time you return next weekend and should be added again with the first flush when you come back aboard. And it should always be flushed into the tank via the toilet, not via the deck pumpout fitting....'cuz if there's any bend in the tank discharge line, it won't get past it into the tank, so it won't do any good. If you're doing that and still have odor, the routing of your vent line may be the problem. If it's long and/or has a lot of bends in it, nothing will work in the tank. It needs to be as short and as straight as possible. Finally, the tank should be at least nominally rinsed out after every pumpout, and the vent line backflushed...and the tank should be thoroughly flushed out 2-3x/season--and especially in preparation for winter layup--to get rid of sludge.
 
Dec 2, 1997
8,959
- - LIttle Rock
Bob, C.P. is also the best drain and sump cleaner

on the planet. Not only does it destroy odo on contact, but the enzymes in it "eat" hair, soap scum, body oils, grease in galley drains etc. But as you've learned, enzymes do need time to work....they aren't chemicals that work instantly. To keep your shower sump clean, put a couple of ounces down the shower drain with a quart or two of water once a week when it can stand at least overnight...or just before you close up the boat. Once a month or so, put an ounce or two down each sink drain, then fill the drain with water, after you've closed the thru-hulls to keep your drains sweet smelling and running freely.
 
Oct 25, 2006
3
- - canada
Physics not Biology

The issue, if l might try to elaborate,is not the fact that odor exists,that is a given and l do as you have prescribed regarding the regular use of "Odorloss" and after pumpout l backwash with fresh water a minimun of twice (we live onboard 7 months of the year). The question is... how does the vent exude odor when the discharge is going overboard through a seperate discharge hose not in anyway connected to the holding tank. The only common connection would be the "y" valve. Would this odor be as a result of a defective "y" valve allowing pressure from the pump into the holding tank and then the vent? Sorry if l was not clear on the initial post.
 
Dec 2, 1997
8,959
- - LIttle Rock
Physics AND biology

And you were very clear in your original post. There is always air in a tank above the surface of the contents. Movement of any liquid in any container will displace air...so any motion of the boat--even slight rocking--will displace air in the tank, and the only place it has to go is out the vent. Your y-valve may be leaking toward the tank too, which could account for why you have more odor out the vent when flushing overboard...but there will always be a little caused just by the rocking of the boat. However, odor in the tank is NOT a given and can be prevented entirely. Odor is a product of ANAEROBIC (absence of oxygen) breakdown of organic material...it's only when waste or any other organic material breaks down anerobically that it can produce smelly gasses--hydrogen sulfide, sulfur dioxide--and also methane, which is odorless, btw. When organic material breaks down AEROBICALLY (oxygenated), it converts entirely to CO2, which is odorless. Aerobic breakdown cannot produce anaerobic gasses. Swamps stink because they're stagnant...running streams don't because the fact that they run oxygenates the water. Compost piles must be regularly tossed to aerate them...otherwise they rot anaerobically and stink. Aerating open sewage treatment ponds prevent them from stinking. So oxygen is also the key to eliminating odor in holding tanks. How Odorlos works: The active ingredient in Odorlos is nitrates, which promote oxygen release from the waste itself...helping to create an aerobic environment. However, aerating the tank contents eliminates odor completely without the need for any tank product. But even Odorlos needs SOME oxygen via the tank vent to work...and it does exhaust itself, so must be added fairly frequently. But unless your tank gets no oxygen from vent, when Odorlos is used according to directions--NOT only just following pumpout, but between pumpouts as needed too--there should be -0- odor out the vent ANY time. You might want to check out the link below for more detail on this subject.
 
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