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It empties by opening the seacock and flowing into the sea
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That tank will have a lot of pressure on it from the 40" of "head" pressure
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Or by connecting to a pumpout with a fitting on deck
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Thin gravity holding tank question
That tank will have a lot of pressure on it from the 40" of "head" pressure
And you will have to pump up hill from the head to the top of the tank.
You should pump up to a vacume breaker that is high anyway. You don't want to have the tank siphon back into the head.
A holding tank can't siphon into the head
I checked with Raritan and they said I would pump up with no problem
The pump is designed to pump up over 6' to the top of a vacuum breaker and then down a hose back to a holding tank.
I guess I'll have to keep up with with a good working joker
Tom, the issue isn't the toilet
vacuum break not necessary on output of tank
Yes there are simple diagrams here is my example
That would be perfect if space allows.
Good but not great
Not really...
It's the vertical height of the head (irrespective of whether it's five miles long or wide?
Still not quite....
correction...
The sides of the tank have to thicker or reinforced more heavily to handle the deeper tank.
Yes I will need to support the sides as well as the bottom
Out tank is made from 1/2" thick welded
It empties by opening the seacock and flowing into the sea
It will only flow out, to the extent that the bottom of the tank is below the waterline (maybe while heeling).
The tank will partly fill when heeling
I think he means that he won't pump the tank out, he'll just open a valve and it will drain into the 3 miles offshore...
The plan is to cruise outside the US
We have a gravity tank like you describe, butlarger
That system should work great.
What I suggest is...
I did similar, and eliminated the Y valve altogether.
I have a similar setup
Yes, except my bladder tank isn't vented.
Risky business...
Maybe you should get rid of that vent, Brian.
Tom, read Peggie's post farther down.
I did, good advice. Thanks.
Correction - not using Snake River gage
Looks like a big tank. How many gallons, Larry?
It's only 18 gallons
Here's an image
I also plan to plumb my sink drain to my head feed
You won't have a trap? Don't do that....
The reason for a trap in sinks in buildings is to block sewer gas
Nothing wrong with doing that