I have found that the most common failures for diaphragm pumps like that are the pressure switch, and valves that leak a little pressure back toward the tank which causes cycling as though there's a slow leak somewhere. Expensive and cheap pumps of that style seem to have the same issues. The motors seem to last forever if they don't get wet.
My solution
- Install a one way valve between the pump inlet and the water tank to address the leak back issue
- Install a pressure tank to slow the cycling in general
- Bypass the factory pressure switch and use a switch meant for a house water pump (if you have gasoline engines, these switches cannot be installed anywhere that fumes can accumulate.) to address the weak OEM pressure switch.
- Install a quick-connect electrical connector on the boat wiring and the pump wiring.
- Use pumps that have quick-connect plumbing fittings.
- Use silicone hose for the plumbing. It stays flexible forever and makes pump swaps really easy.
- Always carry an identical spare that's pre-wired to plug right in.
The steps above will make a cheap pump last a long time and when it does fail the spare can be swapped in, in minutes. The only tool I need to swap a pump is a Phillips screwdriver for the mounting screws.
Great ideas. I ended up ordering a pump/accumulator kit from Whale. I also figured out it was just the pressure switch on the old pump, ordered a replacement switch for it. I'll be using it as a spare, love the idea of quick disconnect for the water and power to facilitate swapping in a spare.
I'll be rigging up the old pump...now new spare with some flexible hoses to allow it to go in easily, and also be used on friend's boats if needed as a spare, and my new setup won't be a bolt in for the old pump. I went with this for a new setup:
It is from Whale, I had good luck replacing a shower box drain with one of their pump systems. Not a fan of their 15mm connections as I have to use an adapter to go to 1/2" fittings with pex on my boat, but hoping it will be a smoother more reliable setup.
A spare pump is a must, no pump really can pretty much end a trip for us. No water, no flushing is a big deal!
I think the Shurflo pump was oversized for my boat, and the constant cycling of the switch caused early failure. The pump would only ever fully run with 2 faucets on. I think the Whale model I bought is a 3GPM vs a 4 GPM, and the tank will help with the cycling and even pressure delivery.
Shurflo tech support was great, helped me figure out how to fix the pump. Whale pre sales support was great as well.
Thanks for all the replies everyone!