Water pressure

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Jeff

When I turn on the water pressure pump it runs continuosly and when a faucet is turned on the water sputters and spurts instead of a steady flow. I have checked for leaks but have not found any. And yes...there is water in the tank. This just started last week. I' ve owned the boat for 2 years and have not had any problems with this until now. Suggestions ??
 
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Jack Laird

You may have checked for leaks

but you didn't find it/them. Keep looking thats the only way air can get in the line.
 
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Peggie Hall/HeadMistress

Diaphragm in the pump has failed...

The average life of a diaphragm is about 5 years...they're inexpensive and easy to replace. Take the make, model and year of the pump to West Marine and buy a diaphragm kit for about $12. And as long as you have the pump apart, it wouldn't hurt to replace the valve...another $10.
 
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Peggie Hall/HeadMistress

Sorry, Jack...not true.

If there were a leak DOWNstream of the pump, the only thing that would happen at a faucet is reduced pressure due to the leak...it wouldn't just spit air. And the leak would be easy to find, 'cuz a) water would be spurting out of it...and b) it would drain your water tank. Only one thing can cause a diaphragm water pump to run continuously and spit air out a faucet instead of water: it's trying to prime and can't--because it's sucking air instead of water. When the water level in the tank drops below the top of the discharge port, that'll cause it...and so will a failed diaphragm...'cuz when the diaphragm fails, the pump sucks air through the tear in it and can't prime. Jeff is sure his water tank is full, so that leaves only one possibility: the diaphragm in the pump has failed. Usually there's some warning...as the diaphragm starts to go, the pump starts cycling for a few seconds for no reason. As the tear gets bigger, it cycles more often and runs longer...till finally it starts running continuously. The time to replace the diaphragm is when the symptoms first start...'cuz Murphy being Murphy, it will choose to quit pumping water altogether an hour before you're expecting guests aboard for a dinner cruise--which is when mine did. Cost me $90 for new pump, 'cuz I had enough time to run to WM for a new new pump and swap 'em out before they arrived, but not enough time to take it apart and fix it. So pay attention what's happening on your boats. A "new" noise--or absence of a usual one--ALWAYS means something...and it's usually cheaper to find out what it is early than after it fails altogether.
 
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Jack Laird

Peggy you are correct again.

I get air in the hoses when the pump runs dry and I then refil the tank. But a slow leak in a hose down stream of the pump would cause the same problem and would not be noticeable if you had a wet bilge anyway. Another vote for a dry bilge.
 
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Peggie Hall/HeadMistress

A leak would be noticeable, Jack...

Even with a wet bilge...'cuz your water tank would mysteriously empty itself and your bilge pump(s) would run. And if the leak were at a faucet connection, you'd have water in lockers. As I said earlier...you can learn a lot about what's happening on your boat BEFORE it becomes a major big deal (and I consider running out of water with a sink full of dirty dishes just as big a deal as an engine that won't start) by paying attention to small details...like the sound of water running when no one's using it...a bilge pump that comes on more often than it should...a water pump that cycles for no reason...a water tank that runs out sooner than it should...new sqeaks, squeals, and things that go bump that never squeaked, squealed or went bump before.
 
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