Annual rebuild isn't necessary
Unless you want to spend $500 over 10 years to keep a $150 toilet working. Even a $100 Jabsco doesn't need it THAT often.The most important thing you can do for any manual toilet is keep it well lubricated, 'cuz without lubrication, the rubber parts wear out much faster. A toilet that is kept well lubricated shouldn't require rebuilding more often than once every 4-5 years. Marine toilets have seals and valves and other parts that wear, and as they wear the toilet becomes less and less efficient. When boats sit for days, the seals and valves dry out and stick to the inside of their housings; dried salt makes them stick even better, and also is abrasive, so pumping a manual toilet without adequate lubrication wears the seals and scratches the inside of the pump cylinder. Many people just wait till the toilet starts to squeak and become hard to pump, then pour some mineral oil or vegetable oil down it. Not only is this very hard on the toilet, but it’s a never-ending job because anything poured down the toilet washes out in just a few flushes. Why is it hard on the toilet? Because a toilet doesn’t squeak unless it needs lubrication; that squeaking is the sound of seals rubbing against the inside of the housing, being worn away. Waiting till it squeaks to lubricate it is like waiting till an engine starts to smoke to add oil. Ever wondered why a new toilet doesn’t need any lubrication for at least a year? It’s because every toilet leaves the factory slathered with thick Teflon grease that takes a full season or more to be flushed out. Replacing it just once a year is all it takes to keep a toilet pumping smoothly. And it’s only a 15 minute job—just open up the top of the pump and put a healthy squirt of it into it…pump the toilet a few times to get it all through the pump, and you’re “good to go” for the entire season. And, by keeping the pump lubricated this way, you extend the life of the seals and valves, reducing the need for rebuilds. The best time to lubricate a toilet is in the fall, as part of winterizing. The Teflon grease protects the rubber parts in the toilet from drying out, which also extends their life.