I just bought a 2000 396 Aft Cabin and I am still learning how every thing works. So I have a silly question, where does the water from the sinks and the showers drain? Does the water get pumped out or does it go into the holding tanks? Also, we have a bad smell coming from the hot water spigots. How do I get rid of that odor? Thanks.
I'm also curious what the ride is like up on the bridge on these boats. I toyed with adding a bridge on my 25' Trojan when I was redoing it, but decided against it.
tgebler wrote:Qr Bbpost I just bought a 2000 396 Aft Cabin and I am still learning how every thing works. So I have a silly question, where does the water from the sinks and the showers drain? Does the water get pumped out or does it go into the holding tanks? Also, we have a bad smell coming from the hot water spigots. How do I get rid of that odor? Thanks.
Can't speak to your specific boat but on my Carver any water in the sinks and shower end up going overboard into the body of water you occupy at that time.
As to the smell in the hot water side of the water system you could try to sanitize the system with some bleach. I tend to overkill. When I bought my Carver I had the same problem. I emptied out most of the water from the fresh water tanks. I added 1 gallon of bleach. Filled the tanks then ran it through all the faucets and spigots until I could smell the bleach. I let it sit overnight then I pumped out all the remaining water and refilled the tanks. The smell was gone, and has remained gone since.
Rick Grew
2025 Godfrey Xperience 2286 SFLX
2004 Past Commodore
West River Yacht & Cruising Club
Like Rick's, my sinks go overboard. The galley and aft sink go directly to thru-hulls, but the forward sink drains into the shower sump, which then gets pumped overboard.
As to the smells. Yes, a good bleaching helps. What I do is fill the water tanks with a fairly strong concentration, then I use a faucet-to-hose adapter on the galley and run that hose back into the water fill port. I turn the galley faucet on (both cold and hot) and let the pump run the water through the system for a while. Then drain the whole system and fill it.
Depending on your water and your water heater, you might also have a zinc anode in the water heater. Those can react with some harder water to create a sulfur smell. You can remove the anode but then may end up shortening the life of the tank. I'd do the bleaching first.
I also found that the old drain hose in my galley sink was full of "ick" when I replaced it. I had not intended on replacing it, but I was replacing the hot and cold lines several years ago and when I got a good look at that hose, decided to replace it. That definitely had a 'smell' that wasn't pleasant. You would not notice it until you poured hot water down the drain and then for a couple hours you would notice a smell.
Valade12, Really nice boat. I have one exactly like it. I noticed that you had the rear seats by the engine, you wouldn't happen to have any blue prints, or anything on them would you? I am looking for some for mine. Thanks