sb55 wrote:
wkearney99 wrote:
Hmmm. I guess that the Vista 248 isn't as "high end" as yours. I don't have any spray, only a bar sink type faucet. The reason why I didn't start to take anything apart, is 'cause I had equal pressure with the shore water. I think that may because shore water has more pressure than the pump, so I suppose working back from the faucet is my next step. I was thinking to drag my compressor to the temp. dock and try to blow back through the system, in case there is an obstruction, rather than take everything apart.
I WOULD NOT USE A COMPRESSOR HERE. The tubing fittings aren't designed to withstand a lot of pressure. You could blow out one (or more) of the fittings and make your life a lot more complicated. Besides, if there is an obstruction you want to remove it, not just force it somewhere else.
Ok, if the flow rate is the same when on shore water then it's likely an obstruction in the cold water line. Possibly just in the short segment that tees off the main line to the faucet. I don't know how the lines run in the 248, but in our 348 there's a single cold water line that runs from the tank, through the pump and then behind the cabinets and then back to the hot water heater. There's a tee off that line for the galley sink, the head sink, the toilet and the shower spray. Is the cold flow rate the same in the head sink? And at any other cold taps? I don't know what you have in your 248, in our 348 there's a transom shower (whose hose tends to kink) and a cockpit sink (cold only).
Since you have decent pressure on the hot side then it's reasonable to assume the main line itself isn't the problem. I say this because the hot water pressure is just being driven by the cold water pumped into it. Since it's ok then the pump must be working ok, as is the main line.
So it's either an issue with the tee of the main line or you've got an obstruction in the handle that the shore water is capable of overcoming. I'd start by taking apart and inspecting the handle first. That's certainly going to be easier than getting inside the cabinet to get to the tee of the main line.