webcraft
Well-Known Member
So the new Attwood pump runs fine...
- W
- W
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Have you got an oscillograph on your smart phone ? That would be useful to check the control signal/output from the sensor to the pump.
Even a simple multimeter might be able to see if the voltage to the pump is below spec.
I'm sure they can go wrong but I have no idea if these are prone to faiure or not.
I would suggest the following tests with the multimeter. All with the black multimeter lead on the negative supply.
1. Measure voltage at the Auto/Man switch manual output to the pump with the switch on manual. This gives a reference to compare the other measurements.
2. Measure voltage at the Auto/Man switch Auto output with the switch on Auto. This should be the brown and white striped wire to the Whale switch. This should be the full battery voltage. If it changes a lot then I think the Auto/Man switch is dodgy.
3. Measure voltage at the Auto/Man switch Man output with the switch on Auto. This is the brown wire out of the Whale switch and the supply to the pump. This should be close to the full battery voltage. If it changes a lot then I reckon the Whale switch is cream crackered.
Not. a safe assumption. They're often the other way.Update... I am assuming the terminals on the panel switch correspond to the depressed end of the rocker switch. If so, then the brown and white wire from the Whale switch goes to the brown wire on the panel switch, but this appears to be connected to the Manual switch position.
The other wire (blue) goes to the Auto switch position.
Or does it? The terminals are labelled
ON - OFF - (ON)
WHICH IS MANUAL AND WHICH AUTOMATIC?
Now hopelessly confused!!!
- W
Wire the bilge pump to a manual switch.
Wire the float switch to a warning light/buzzer.
Fix the leaks and dry the bilge with a cloth.
Check your manual pumps work.
Don't rely on cheap plastic pumps which are really made for non-critical jobs like pumping the rain out of unsinkable fishing boats on US lakes. They're tat that chandlers love to flog, flying off the shelf at high margin.
Don't put lots of effort into mickey mouse wiring that you're never going to trust anyway.
Invest in his'n'hers bailing buckets.
Unless you're leaving the boat unattended in the water for a year, the stuffing box should not leak enough water to prime a centrifugal pump. Most of these pumps need a couple of inches of water to pump effectively and that's after they've filled the outlet pipe.
It's a shame diaphragm type electric pumps are so much more expensive.
Given the importance of a working auto bilge pump and the relatively low cost involved I’d replace the whole lot. I’ve found trying to work out old installations is more trouble than it‘s worth, I’m currently binning my apparently none functional float switch and replacing with an auto pump leaving the original pump as a manually switched back up.
Yes, they do go wrong. Bin it is my advice, having seen 4 out of five fail on a boat, 2 - 3 years after fitting.Do you mean, check the voltage going to the pump when the electronic field sensor is running the pump?
I am an electric idiot, but I can't think of any other reason the pump would run slow and rough on auto but OK on manual.
Unless it is the panel switch. So testing the voltage at the pump wouldn't point me at the culprit?
(And I am not sure exactly where to meter across... presumably the live (+ve) from the switch and the - ve to the pump?)
I have no idea how these field sensor switches work... It's just a magic box. Can/do they go wrong?
- W
Yes, they do go wrong. Bin it is my advice, having seen 4 out of five fail on a boat, 2 - 3 years after fitting.