I'm not normally a basher - check all my posts on multiple forums - but I can show you the receipts on this one. My boat is a 2001 and the first freeze-up was in 2006, talked to Depco and they said it was shot - shaft was frozen. $398 + tax and shipping for a new one. 2 years later, frozen again blowing fuses. I took it out and put a wrench to the shaft nut and worked it loose. Ran for another year or so and froze up again. Sent off to Gross Mechanical labs and they fixed it for $211. Froze up again late last year, blowing fuses, Gross says needs new one - finally drove me to re-engineer the whole thing. Crazy thing was it never had any solids in there - liquids only! If it wasn't for a difficult fuse location, 12 nuts, 12 lock washers, 12 flat washers, 2 hoses and 2 wires and challenging access down in an awkward hole, maybe it would be a different story. $170 for a self-priming, stainless cutter, run-dry protection Jabsco pump, a few pieces of PVC from Home Depot a short length of marine sanitation hose gets me an external pump, direct access to the pump nut if it freezes and easy access for pump replacement if necessary. Sure beats future repairs on a sewage-soaked piece of equipment. Oh yeah, the $170 includes a Plus Plan extended 2-year warranty. To add further insult, one of the Groco tank level monitor floats were rotted and broken off and floating in the tank last time I opened it up - so my level monitor doesn't work. $296 for a replacement level monitor?? - yikes. I know 2001 is an old boat but the Groco solution just did not work well for me. In addition, I was told you had to "exercise" the pump often, so every month or so I would flush fresh water through the system just to keep things working - to no avail. Sorry, that's my story - just the facts. I really tried to make the Groco solution work.