Little Dorrit
Well-Known Member
Does such a thing exist? Is there any way of solving the slow or no drainage problem I'm having with my sink?
Is there any way of solving the slow or no drainage problem I'm having with my sink?
The reason that it was there is that the sink back fills via the waste pipe when well healed, however serviced seacocks now prevent that.
If your outlet is below the waterline it will always be slow to drain because of the head of water in the lower part of the pipe. Only solution is to take the outlet up to the waterline as it is on many modern boats.
Is there any way of solving the slow or no drainage problem I'm having with my sink?
It's a Vancouver 27...you could be right I'll have a look.If your outlet is below the waterline it will always be slow to drain because of the head of water in the lower part of the pipe. Only solution is to take the outlet up to the waterline as it is on many modern boats.
It's a Vancouver 27...you could be right I'll have a look.
I'd expect the two valves in a waste water pump to be twice as much trouble!Older boats like mine with low freeboard can have slow sink drainage due to lack of head, as well as backfilling issues.
A waste pump helps greatly with both. less/no need to remember to shut the sea-cock.
I'd expect a NRV in the sink-drain to give constant trouble.
I'd expect the two valves in a waste water pump to be twice as much trouble!
Obviously Pascal's efforts were wasted! Despite Tranona's undoubted taste in yachts, his assertion that lifting the outlet will improve flow is sadly flawed.
While you are in the bath tonight, take with you 1m of 25mm plastic tube. Submerge the bottom 25cm in your bath water. Fill the tube, preferably with coloured water. Not how slowly the level of the yellow water falls as it is achieving equilibrium by pushing against the 25cm head of water.
You have now replicated the OPs problem.
Now lift the tube out of the bath water and note how quickly the remaining water runs out.
You have now solved the Ops problem. Raise the outlet above the waterline - or more likely just on the waterline and the only constraint to draining will be the diameter of the hose and the head of water in the sink.
The head of water does not change, because the sink remains at the same height.
(actually if the outlet is to one side, the fall in the hose will be less on one tack.).
There is a bit less viscous resistance from the water at the end of the hose.
At the price of a greasy stain from the drain to the waterline.
And on most boats, a longer hose. Which means more drag, particularly if the hose is not straight.
While you are in the bath tonight, take with you 1m of 25mm plastic tube. Submerge the bottom 25cm in your bath water. Fill the tube, preferably with coloured water. Not how slowly the level of the yellow water falls as it is achieving equilibrium by pushing against the 25cm head of water.
You have now replicated the OPs problem.
Now lift the tube out of the bath water and note how quickly the remaining water runs out.
You have now solved the Ops problem. Raise the outlet above the waterline - or more likely just on the waterline and the only constraint to draining will be the diameter of the hose and the head of water in the sink.