Gina Marie said:
Thanks Genesis from the replies and the cost - back to the repair. Genesis I know you had a 45c how tough to change the sanitation hoses on the head system I have two heads thanks tom.
Oh Gezus, you don't want to know.
To get to some of the clamps you are going to have to cut two access hatches - one in the head, one in the master.
You want my view on this? If you have to replace the hoses consider a complete re-do. Rip out the old two-component system ENTIRELY, along with all the hoses.
Then buy one of the new combo pump + tank deals. Put it under the V-berth in the forward S/R. Run heads to it (very short runs now, .vs. huge long runs)
Now run the OUTLET of that directly to the tank (again, SHORT run.)
Now take the EXISTING tank pump-out and put a "Y" in that line under the galley floor. Run the outlet side of that "Y" (the end that does not go to the deck pumpout fitting) back to the ER; the only hose going back there now. Add a new Sealand diaphram pump (same one used for the Vacuflush but only one set of duckbills - used as a macerator rather than as a vacuum pump) and the outlet of THAT goes to the O/B discharge.
Now you have a system that has about 1/3rd of the hose which was originally there, you no longer have to climb outboard of the port engine to get to the pump and tank (which is a REAL PROBLEM when you have trouble) the crap all flows downhill (a very good thing) directly to the tank. You comply with all the new directives and avoid the entire "you can't have an O/B discharge" crap, because your system doesn't - it ALWAYS flushes to the holding tank. The tank on these boats is HUGE and with a V/F will last you a couple of weeks if you're living on the boat, and MONTHS if you're a "weekend warrior" before it needs to be sucked out.
And - if you're offshore and its legal, you can dump the tank to sea.
This is what I'd do if I had to go to the trouble to screw with this. Believe me, its not a job you want to do more than once.