salt water flush vs. fresh water flush

quote:

Originally posted by PortHoleDiver

Tell SeaRay that. My vacuflush system on our old 30'Sedan Bridge had only one water tank. I now have SWF and KNOW my water is safe.

quote:

Originally posted by rawidman

quote:

Originally posted by jmeirhofer

Is it difficult to convert from one to the other?





You cannot safely convert a raw water flush head to a fresh water flush head unles you install a seperate water tank just for the head and do not connect it in any way to the potable water system of the boat.

















There is no need to tell SeaRay anything. I posted "You cannot safely convert a raw water flush head to a fresh water flush head" (emphasis added).

A Vacuflush head is designed to be connected to the boat's potable water system without contaminating it. This is very different than trying to convert a raw water flush head to use the potable water system.
 
I see this thread is still going. For what it is worth, I have decided it will be much easier to stay with the current system and just get water more often or add a water maker if lack of water becomes an issue.
 
quote:

Originally posted by jmeirhofer

I see this thread is still going. For what it is worth, I have decided it will be much easier to stay with the current system and just get water more often or add a water maker if lack of water becomes an issue.






John, if you spend a lot of time out on the hook a water maker is a great addition to your boat. I use a Katadyn na dit works well, is simple to maintain and operate. it isn't a fancy automatic unit but it works very well for me. It's not very fast, but it is simple and reliable.

Since my Raritan ME head only uses about a pint of water per flush, my little water maker is more than sufficient.

Bob
 
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