Valve on holding tank vent hose

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Dec 23, 2006
15
Beneteau 38s5 Jefferson Beach Marina, St. Clair Shores
On my 38s5 there is an on-off valve on the aft holding tank vent hose. I'm curious as to what it is for. For example, am I supposed to close it when I have that tank pumped out?
 

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Jun 16, 2005
476
- - long beach, CA
vented

Not exactly sure why yours is there; but I put one in both holding tanks on my '94 Bene OC400. The macerator pump could not hold/generate a prime, so the tank was difficult to pump at sea. I added the valve and a T fitting so I could use my dinghy air pump to pressurize the tank and help get the stuff moving thru the hose to the pump. It worked well, but care was vital to avoid unpleasant mistakes. Evenually, though, the pump-out stations in CA were greatly improved and I no longer pump the tanks at sea and just leave the valves open. You don't want to close them and try to pump out, that would induce a vacuum and make pump out next to impossible.
 
Dec 2, 1997
8,967
- - LIttle Rock
Must be open at all times

Why the shutoff valve is there: Larry's explanation for his is one I've never heard before...but if it worked...:) However the most common reason: If your boat ever did any serious cruising offshore where weather conditions can sometimes keep decks awash for days, a shutoff valve on vent lines prevents the tank from taking on water through the vents, especially if the tank is forward in the boat and the vent line runs forward. Most blue water owners have the ability to flush directly overboard at seas, so there's no risk of pressurizing the tank while the vent is closed--as long as they remember to open it again when they get into coastal waters again. Shutoffs aren't standard, so yours has to be owner installed by a PO. Unusual to find one on an aft tank, though...ever rarer to find one on a boat on inland waters...unless the location of the vent thru-hull coupled with the amount the boat heels puts the thru-hull underwater for long periods. However, that can usually be solved with a clamshell over it. I doubt if you're gonna spend much time in conditions that would require closing the vent...and besides, since you're on the Great Lakes (ok, not quite ON 'em, but between two of 'em), any previous option your boat may have had to flush overboard has either been removed or is illegal if it hasn't benn. So I'd remove the valve if I were you...and eliminate the risk of it becing closed by someone who doesn't know any better. 'Cuz flushing into a tank with a blocked vent will pressurize the tank, resulting in anything from a geyser when you open the deck fitting to an eruption in the toilet, or even a burst tank...and trying to pump out against a blocked vent is impossible--the pumpout will just pull a vacuum...a particularly strong pumpout can implode a tank. (This is a repeat of my reply to the same question in the HM forum, which is a shared forum on all the sbo.com sites. You'll make my life much easier if you post any additional comments or questions to this thread in that forum instead of this one. Thank you.)
 
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