ocnslr
GreatGrady Captain
- Joined
- Jan 31, 2005
- Messages
- 1,907
- Reaction score
- 43
- Points
- 48
- Location
- Fort Myers Beach, FL
- Model
- Islander
GW VOYAGER said:I'm glad to hear no one was hurt.
What I would like to know is as follows
1 Does this come apart on a pump happen very often
2 Was this the type pump where you replace the head if it burns out and is held together by the plastic clips on the side of the pump.
I had to replace a raw water pump and did so with one that comes apart maybe not a smart move on my part.
I feel it is better to buy pumps that don't come apart than trying to remember to turn sea cocks on and off.
If you do a lot of fishing that would be a lot of turning on and off.
1. Haven't heard of any other pump failures of this type, but I'm sure they have likely occurred.
2. yes, I beleive it was the cartridge type pump.
Using a different style pump, instead of following a more seamanlike seacock protocol, will only protect you from a pump casing failure. It will not protect you from hose failure, hose clamp failure, or inadvertent overfilling of the livewell.
The raw water and livewell seacocks on our boat are closed. We open the livewell if we are going to use it, otherwise it stays closed. We open the raw water washdown when we get ready to washdown for the first time. It stays open while fishing, but gets closed before the run home. The seacock for raw water for the head is closed until needed the first time each day, and gets closed at the end of the day. Note that this is not a scoop injection, so far less pressure on the system.
Brian