1Northernstar
Member
- Joined
- Feb 15, 2007
- RO Number
- 25222
- Messages
- 9
At the beginning of the year, I had that permeated holding tank odor in the boat. Previous owner had replaced some of the waste hoses, but not the "tough" ones. So I proceeded to replace all of them.
When I removed the hoses, I capped the ends - then pulled them thru the bilge areas. So there was almost no waste that got in the bilge when these were replaced.
At first, the odor seemed to go away - but now its back. Or did it just vastly improve, but
never fully go away?
When I replaced the hoses, I had an inlet Y-valve that diverted to the tank or direcly overboard. I removed that from the system and plumbed directly to the tank. So no leaky Y-valve causing a problem.
I also have an outlet Y-valve that diverts to the pumpout or to the macerator. I originally didn't change the short stubby hoses (approx 4") between the tank an the Y-valve and between the Y-valve and the macerator. Thinking these may have been the problem - I've since replaced these.
Still the smell exists....so now the questions:
- can the outlet Y-valve actually get permeated? Its a Whale systems waste Y-valve, but I don't know the age. A sniff test at less than 1" distance seems its pretty clean.
- can the macerator have a smell problem. It looks original, functions properly, and a sniff test also seems pretty clean.
- Can the holding tank get permeated? Its a poly tank (mfgr name escapes me - starts with "K" and is from midwest (Wisc?)
- can the new hoses get permeated in such a short time? These do have a little smell to them, but is the outter surface of the hose absorbing the smell (rather than is coming from the inside-out)?
I've hear PVC is the way to go. Is this really accurate? I can possible get a majority of it plumbed in PVC, but I'd have a few section of hose left. Is there any warnings/pitfalls from PVC?
I'm really at wits end trying to solve this odor problem. My next thought is to simply replace the entire waste system and start with new everything. But that's a chunk o' change I'd rather avoid if possible.
Thoughts/comments/input welcomed from all...
Thanks. Pat.
When I removed the hoses, I capped the ends - then pulled them thru the bilge areas. So there was almost no waste that got in the bilge when these were replaced.
At first, the odor seemed to go away - but now its back. Or did it just vastly improve, but
never fully go away?
When I replaced the hoses, I had an inlet Y-valve that diverted to the tank or direcly overboard. I removed that from the system and plumbed directly to the tank. So no leaky Y-valve causing a problem.
I also have an outlet Y-valve that diverts to the pumpout or to the macerator. I originally didn't change the short stubby hoses (approx 4") between the tank an the Y-valve and between the Y-valve and the macerator. Thinking these may have been the problem - I've since replaced these.
Still the smell exists....so now the questions:
- can the outlet Y-valve actually get permeated? Its a Whale systems waste Y-valve, but I don't know the age. A sniff test at less than 1" distance seems its pretty clean.
- can the macerator have a smell problem. It looks original, functions properly, and a sniff test also seems pretty clean.
- Can the holding tank get permeated? Its a poly tank (mfgr name escapes me - starts with "K" and is from midwest (Wisc?)
- can the new hoses get permeated in such a short time? These do have a little smell to them, but is the outter surface of the hose absorbing the smell (rather than is coming from the inside-out)?
I've hear PVC is the way to go. Is this really accurate? I can possible get a majority of it plumbed in PVC, but I'd have a few section of hose left. Is there any warnings/pitfalls from PVC?
I'm really at wits end trying to solve this odor problem. My next thought is to simply replace the entire waste system and start with new everything. But that's a chunk o' change I'd rather avoid if possible.
Thoughts/comments/input welcomed from all...
Thanks. Pat.