
The head hose leaves the head, runs through a vented loop, and then to the top of the tank. The discharge side of the tank all goes through the manual whale pump, either to the through-hull or the pumpout. 
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Outlook
I'll share what I did. I got a custom welded polypropylene tank from Triple-M Plastics. It is quite large at about 30 gallons and shaped to fit the space. It's only heavy if it's full. If I am in a weight caring mode it is empty. If I need the capacity it is there. 12 gal seems too small to me. The tank has baffles in it.
All fittings are on the top with dip tube for pumpout. The head goes straight to the holding tank with no vented loop or overboard discharge. The tank has two vents that lead to two vent-thru-hull fittings, one port and one starboard. The inlet and both vents are on centerline. There are three ports for flushing. One all the way to port and one to starboard and one in the center. They all have cutoff valves and there is a fitting to connect to a hose. The flush inlets cover all three sections of the baffled tank. They are plumbed with pvc. There is a second dip tube that I can run to overboard discharge (with a pump) if desired someday. Or it is a backup in case of failure for the first.
Originally the inlet was at the edge to keep the hose run short. But I released on starboard tack the hose could back-fill with heeling even with the tank mostly empty so I moved it to center. It could still back-fill but the tank needs to be a lot more full for that to happen.
Hope that all makes sense. Sound more complex than it is?
Some more photos here of the v-berth space and a test fit of a foam tank mock-up:
http://dan.pfeiffer.net/10m/v-berth_rebuild.htm
Dan Pfeiffer
On 2025-12-15 8:14 am, Guy Johnson wrote:
"The tank discharge will go to a Y-valve, with one side going to the through-hull, and the other going to the pumpout."From a plumbing standpoint you don't need a Y valve, a simple T fitting will work. You head goes directly to the tank, so there is no chance of overboard discharge while using the head.GuyPuffin 10M #6 (with a T fitting)Sent from Outlook
From: pearso...@googlegroups.com <pearso...@googlegroups.com> on behalf of Jeffrey D <jeff....@gmail.com>
Sent: Sunday, December 14, 2025 7:23 PM
To: pearso...@googlegroups.com <pearso...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: [pearson] Re: Head tank fun.
Well......
Just going to toss out there that that was easily the most horrific thing I've ever had to do on a boat.That seawater-in fitting had some sort of filter on it:
But I can't imagine what it was used for unless it was to flush the tank with saltwater during pumpout. Update: Chat GPT says it's a flushing standpipe.
The tank itself seems to be watertight, but I'm looking to replace it regardless, as I don't need all the holes in it. I also don't need - 1-1/2" inlet from the macerating head-just a 1".It looks like this Ronco tank is the right one:I figure I'll keep the tank vents that go to the bow and abandon the vent next to the pumpout. It certainly doesn't seem original.One other thing that struck me as odd-the head discharge line runs through a vented loop between the head and holding tank. I can't say I've ever seen that on the discharge side, only the inlet. And this boat doesn't have a loop on the saltwater side.
On Sun, Dec 14, 2025 at 14:35 Jeffrey D <jeff....@gmail.com> wrote:
Okay...Pulling the head tank today and having some 'what were they thinking' moments...
It looks like there are three vent lines. The two to the bow vent seem normal, but the one that sits next to the pumpout cap on deck has a tight-fitting cap. I'm assuming it's there to provide ample intake during pumpout so as not to implode the tank. For the life of me, I can't understand why there's a line from the saltwater tap to the tank. Otherwise it has the regular in-at-the -top, out-at-the-bottom hoses.
Switching over to the seacock area.
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