lenten
Well-Known Member
thinking of buying one any views welcome------thanks
Mine has a fairly large cockpit opening on a 9m boat, so used to get up to 120mm or so of water in it over a bad week of rain before I fitted it (grp and I don't really want the bother of a cover). Pretty low freeboard too and we do tend to emulate a submarine when pushing hard, so it has its work cut out. The exit is in the foredeck and the lift must be about 90omm. I run it from a motorcycle battery and a 30A panel, the weight of which is trivial compared to that of the water it throws out. I'd not go back to a float switch.it is for an open boat and always a bit of water from somewhere ---rain/slop/spray---- my main pump is a whale mk 10 hand pump ----just wanted a bit of extra pump capacity
for all the reasons above. it buzzes just as I'm nodding off, it uses more power than a float switch version and my biggest dislike is that the slightest bit of oil in the bilge and it doesn't work. So the boat sinks and the water gets polluted anyway. I have a greaser for my stern gland and the bilge is always a little wet and a little greasy and I have to degrease it every few months to keep it working.hi buck----why don t you like it?
I know several people who've used them OK in open boats, most of them would say it's more reliable than a float switch.it is for an open boat and always a bit of water from somewhere ---rain/slop/spray---- my main pump is a whale mk 10 hand pump ----just wanted a bit of extra pump capacity-------------------------------------------------------------------------and the children want to buy me a birthday present and there is nothing i ever want apart from a bottle of wray and nephews overproof rum which they get fed up with buying
... the slightest bit of oil in the bilge and it doesn't work. So the boat sinks and the water gets polluted anyway. I have a greaser for my stern gland and the bilge is always a little wet and a little greasy and I have to degrease it every few months to keep it working.
it is for an open boat and always a bit of water from somewhere ---rain/slop/spray---- my main pump is a whale mk 10 hand pump ----just wanted a bit of extra pump capacity-------------------------------------------------------------------------and the children want to buy me a birthday present and there is nothing i ever want apart from a bottle of wray and nephews overproof rum which they get fed up with buying
Please explain. Since the motor runs based on detecting liquid (amps) in the pump, why would oil have anything to do this it? No relationship.
Or are we confusing this with conductivity switch types (does not sound like it), which can be coated with oil, though it generally takes a lot more oil than you would want to risk discharging. If the latter is the case, you really need an OWS on the sump discharge.
Get to boat, check bilge, more water than I would expect, check pump is in auto, check battery usage log over last month, notice it stopped cycling 2 weeks ago, wait 5 minutes to see if pump runs, it doesn't, switch pump on manually, pump runs, put switch back to auto and wait, pump doesn't run, remove pump from bilge and put in bucket of clean water, switch to auto, pump doesn't run, put washing up liquid in bucket with water and put pump to on , run water through pump for 5 minutes, change water, switch to auto and wait, pump now runs every 2.5 minutes and runs until a few seconds after I lift it out of water, leave it like this for several hours while I do other maintenance tasks to confirm correct operation, fit pump back in bilge and monitor auto operation for a few days, pump works so think it's fixed, leave boat for a number of weeks/months, return to boat and repeat.
After the fourth repetition i'm quite happy with my diagnosis. Do you have a different explanation for the recurrent fault?
People who pump out oily bilge water need a good talking to.
Perhaps it's a good thing that Rule pumps don't want to do this?