johnalison
Well-Known Member
Nothing that a good dose of senna or lactulose couldn’t put right.
Difficult to relate that to the symptoms described in #1 unless you had managed to suck a brown one back into the inlet.UPDATE
After six weeks of living with the problem, suddeny an almighty gush of shite into the bowl and all is well.
Inlet and outlet through-hulls too close together!
— W
As Adam said to EveUPDATE
After six weeks of living with the problem, suddeny an almighty gush of shite into the bowl and all is well.
Inlet and outlet through-hulls too close together!
— W
Difficult to relate that to the symptoms described in #1 unless you had managed to suck a brown one back into the inlet.
'
Or else your constipation has finally relented.UPDATE
After six weeks of living with the problem, suddeny an almighty gush of shite into the bowl and all is well.
Inlet and outlet through-hulls too close together!
— W
Must have been some shite if it stayed intact in the inlet for 6 weeksYes Vic, that is obviously what happened
- W
Exactly. I have the same problem, as yet unresolved, on my loo. A call to Jabsco soon confirmed the exact same advice that VicS has provided.The downstroke pumps the waste out AND draws water in from outside.
The upstroke draws the waste out of the bowl and pumps the flush water into the bowl
Therefore, if the pressure is on the downstroke, but is not due to obstruction of the waste being pumped out, the problem is with the incoming flush water.
Yes it's the white one - I just can't get much purchase on it. Could be a good excuse to get a cordless heat gun!Assume by pipe you mean hose between the pump and seacock. If stiffer style of hose, such as the plastic spiral wound sanitary hose, use boiling water or a heat gun to soften the material. If it is the grey rubber style sanitary hose, much softer, try rotating in the spigots first using a strap wrench.
Just have a handy bung to put in to stem the flow. Some Root vegetables work well in an emergency, and are easy to shove in.Can you dry out against a wall? Gives you a few hours. Much easier as if you do crack the pipe whilst afloat, boats fill up alarmingly quickly.
If it's been on quite a while it sometimes needs the end of the hose cutting off the hose barb of a seacock and/or pump, I find.
After removing 'Jubilee' type clamp, carefully cut along the bit of hose on the fitting with e.g. Stanley knife, Dremel or hacksaw blade, taking care not to damage the hose barb of the fitting (especially if plastic). You might not need to cut all the way through, or all along the length on the fitting, to weaken it enough to get it off.
If need be for better access to do the above you can cut off the hose immediately above the fitting, but while this gives more room for hands, sightlines and two directions to cut the hose on the fitting from, this means you don't have the leverage of the hose to pull off the remains of the end when it's only partly cut through.
Once you've got it off the fitting, cut the deformed end off the hose and you can re-connect it again if the remaining hose length is enough, otherwise you will need to replace the whole hose.
When buying new hose it can be well worth buying the special flexible butyl waste hose made by Venus and others. Noticeably more expensive (and slightly thicker external diameter) than standard stiff reinforced plastic hose, but much easier to get on and off fittings (so much so I've also used it for e.g. cockpit drains when access is limited). This ease of getting it on and off fitting is especially valuable in larger diameter hoses/fittings, but this type of hose is also available IIRC in smaller sizes for e.g. water inlets.
Thanks, that's great advice. I'll try warming it first. I'm not sure it's really stuck, it goes through a very small bulkhead so it's difficult to pull it from either end.
Provided the outlet pipe has a loop going well above the waterline and there is a syphon break vent it should not be an issue, although you will get back any liquid between the bowl and the top of the loopAs I said in the OP, I can't completely shut the outlet seacock, so stripping the pump could get messy . . .
Or can I remove it without flooding the boat?
Far too much information thereWe had a blocked inlet pipe the other day. After disconnecting at the heads, I tried a pump type sink unblocker to no avail, pipe too long I think. A moment of inspiration, I rammed the paddle board pump outlet into the pipe. At 7 psi there was a distinct rumbling sound, a seismic moment. Then it blew air continually. Problem resolved.