Fresh Water Pump
- Mike11
- Scurvy Dog

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Fresh Water Pump
This maybe a stupid question but asking anyway. I have a 97 Carver 350 Mariner. If I hook my hose up to the dock freshwater and connect the other end of the hose to my boat, do I need to use the water pump or does it automatically pressurize with hose attached to the dock water? What about water heater? Thanks for any advise.
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Viper
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Re: Fresh Water Pump
No such thing as stupid questions here! When you hook up to dockside, it pressurizes the whole water system except your tank. You leave your pump shut off. The water heater operation is the same whether you're running the pump or dockside water hookup.
- waybomb
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Re: Fresh Water Pump
May I add, be safe. Disconnect the hose when you leave the boat. It can fill up pretty quickly if a line breaks.
Thanks
Fred
1969 Glaspar Avalon /1967 Johnson Electromatic 85
1987 Carver Mariner
1988 Cougar Kevlar 46' with triple blown 572 ci
1995 Boston Whaler Rage
Past - 1988 2807, 1989 4207 Aft
Fred
1969 Glaspar Avalon /1967 Johnson Electromatic 85
1987 Carver Mariner
1988 Cougar Kevlar 46' with triple blown 572 ci
1995 Boston Whaler Rage
Past - 1988 2807, 1989 4207 Aft
- bud37
- Admiral

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Re: Fresh Water Pump
Considering this is the first time, I would check all the bilges after you connect to dockside water to double check there are no leaks at the start.....good luck with your boat.
FWIW.....The above is just my opinion.
- RGrew176
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Re: Fresh Water Pump
99% of the time I use my onboard system. I forget the exact amount but when full my tanks carry 92 gallons of water. More than enough for most of my uses. The few times I do connect to dockside water I too always turn off the water at the faucet whenever I leave the boat for any amount of time.
Rick Grew
2025 Godfrey Xperience 2286 SFLX
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West River Yacht & Cruising Club
2025 Godfrey Xperience 2286 SFLX
2004 Past Commodore
West River Yacht & Cruising Club
- km1125
- Admiral

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Re: Fresh Water Pump
We used to just use the onboard tank and periodically refill it, but every now and then get caught with less water in the tank than we though and have to run out and refill. After YEARS of doing it that way, I finally got a filter and connected the shore water directly, and for the last several years enjoyed that feature. It is another connection that has to be made on docking and unmade when leaving but the benefits in between made up for it. However, you do get a little sloppy with your water conservation skill which get honed when you're living tank-to-tank.
Our on-board pump is usually set to a higher pressure than our dock supply, so if we left the pump on while we had the shore connection hooked up we'd still drain the tank.
Sometimes having the extra pressure in the pump is valuable. A few times I'd connect the hose to the tank (to f supply it with water) while using the on-board pump for pressure. Sometimes in the peak of summer our dock pressure would be so low that washing the boat with weak pressure was a problem. Using the on-board pump to supply the hose pressure solved that.
Our on-board pump is usually set to a higher pressure than our dock supply, so if we left the pump on while we had the shore connection hooked up we'd still drain the tank.
Sometimes having the extra pressure in the pump is valuable. A few times I'd connect the hose to the tank (to f supply it with water) while using the on-board pump for pressure. Sometimes in the peak of summer our dock pressure would be so low that washing the boat with weak pressure was a problem. Using the on-board pump to supply the hose pressure solved that.
- chpsk8
- First Mate

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Re: Fresh Water Pump
I would also suggest bouncing between the shore water and the tank water. I've made the mistake of staying on shore water for a few weeks and the tank water doesn't get changed out. Then suddenly the tank water is funky and you don't notice it until you've left the dock and you're wondering why the sink smells like rotten eggs!
For sure the best advice is to shut off that shore water when you leave the boat. We had a dock neighbor sink his boat overnight. His bilge pump couldn't keep up with the leaking water system.
For sure the best advice is to shut off that shore water when you leave the boat. We had a dock neighbor sink his boat overnight. His bilge pump couldn't keep up with the leaking water system.
- denpooch
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Re: Fresh Water Pump
I most often use tank water in order to keep it moving.
When I travel and find myself at a transient dock I hook up to dockside water with an 'inline' water filter. As previously mentioned, shut off the power to your pump and the dock pressure takes care of the rest.
I too, shut off the water supply if we are going out for dinner, etc.
I also use the water filter when topping off the tanks.
https://www.westmarine.com/buy/west-mar ... ecordNum=1
When I travel and find myself at a transient dock I hook up to dockside water with an 'inline' water filter. As previously mentioned, shut off the power to your pump and the dock pressure takes care of the rest.
I too, shut off the water supply if we are going out for dinner, etc.
I also use the water filter when topping off the tanks.
https://www.westmarine.com/buy/west-mar ... ecordNum=1
- Mike11
- Scurvy Dog

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Re: Fresh Water Pump
Awesome advise from all. Thank you for the information. This group is awesome for new Carver owners learning the ins & outs of our boats. Much appreciated.
- JohnS
- Deck Hand

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Re: Fresh Water Pump
I use a quick connect fitting on my dock hose from Lowes, makes it quick and easy to disconnect when we leave.