Originally posted by ragboy
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my bad.... didn't realize we're talking about x-link between plug and play bags. I thought we're just talking about bags with dedicated pumps on them. I see your point. In my scenario I've just got an impeller pump to each 1100 in the locker and an impeller pump between the two. the xover pump cut my fill times in half. 5-6 minutes for an 1100 is a very reasonable fill time.
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Tigé Junkie
- May 2013
- 920
- Central MN
- 2007 22Ve & 2015 Boston Whaler SS150 Previous: 2014 G23, 2013 Z1, 1997 Marada I/O
Originally posted by chpthril View PostKeep in mind, we are talking about a boat that has a 30 gallon tank under the floor, that fills first. Then, in order to get 4-5 inches of water in a custom sac thats roughly 22"W x 100"L, you are talking another 47 gallons. So thats roughly 4 minutes of waiting, until the transfer pump will be activated. If there was a 2nd 1200 fill pump, you would already have 154 gallons, or 1300 lbs, of ballast in that side, before the transfer pump moved one oz. And this is only 2 pumps running with a combined current draw of about 9A."I think I am pretty smart for an idiot"
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Originally posted by ragboy View PostWe use 1100 rules and 1 1/8 inch hose. Our huge sacks with the hard tanks fill in 9 mins with just the one pump. That seems pretty acceptable to me. I am thinking Tige's stock pumps since 2013.5 or so should be the same? Or are the rules better somehow? I got the rules because I heard of reliability and because I liked the way they were built, thinking it would have better priming. I have never had any more priming issues, but I think that is more because at the same time we found the issue with front priming and fixed it. So I am not sure if the rules are really better or not, but I do like the way they are made better.2013 Z3 - Electric blue and black
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Tigé Jedi
- Jul 2010
- 4302
- TN USA
- Ballast Sensors, Hose Sensors, IMU's, Tige SpeedSet panels and more shipping every day!
BTW, my crosspumps are aerator pumps. One each side, right behind the sac they draw from to insure priming, pumping sideways to and then up and into the top of the opposite stern sac. Works great and, as noted above, cuts fill, switch, and drain time about in half because you are able to use the fill/drain pumps from both sides to act on a single side's fat sac.
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Originally posted by WABoating View PostBTW, my crosspumps are aerator pumps. One each side, right behind the sac they draw from to insure priming, pumping sideways to and then up and into the top of the opposite stern sac. Works great and, as noted above, cuts fill, switch, and drain time about in half because you are able to use the fill/drain pumps from both sides to act on a single side's fat sac.
Also, can you modify an existing sack with a new inlet/outlet? I guess for cross pumps, you would need a top inlet and bottom outelt for each sack (but the questions remains).
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Tigé Junkie
- May 2013
- 920
- Central MN
- 2007 22Ve & 2015 Boston Whaler SS150 Previous: 2014 G23, 2013 Z1, 1997 Marada I/O
Fitting can be added to a ballast sack and is not as difficult as I expected - granted I had help, encouragement and a good set of directions from chpthril .
Below is a link to a ballast upgrade where chpthril shares some of the instruction (post #13)
http://www.tigeowners.com/forum/show...446#post467446
If working with Mike (chpthril), he also has a well laid out document with slightly more direction that he may share with you. I followed his direction, cut the hole, added the fitting with sealant, let it cure, hooked everything up and to my surpise it all worked.
If adding a crossover pump, yes - you need to draw from the bottom of the one sac and ideally input to the top of the other. The impeller pumps could push into the bottom, but any pressure it needs to pump against will reduct the total time to fill."I think I am pretty smart for an idiot"
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Mike talked me out of an aerator cross pump and into a reversible pump. His kit included a rocker switch and his killer customer service
If you just go bag to bag, the reversible cross pump hose runs are VERY easy.
I made it messier by adding a Y valve so I could have a hose to fill extra bags on the seat when I am running a small crew.
A side benefit:
1) You can completely drain the big sac pancake thin with the reversible by draining it into the other sac.
2) Then I turn the Y valve and drain the water left in that sac over the side and that sac gets pancake thin
I am tempted at some point to add a reversible for my bow sacs so they can drain completely.
Basically, I love my cross-pump setup from Mike. VERY happy with it. It speeds it up/drains better/fill my extra sacs etc.Mods: MLA BIG Ballast System (1800+ Custom sacs, 2 500 W705 sacs under bow), Duffy Surf Flap Mod, Trimmed Swim Deck, Top-Mount Starter
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Originally posted by Duncan View PostI have worked with Chpthril for all my ballast stuffMikes Liquid Audio: Knowledge Experience Customer Service you can trust-KICKER WetSounds ACME props FlyHigh Custom Ballast Clarion LiquidLumens LEDs Roswell Wave Deflector And More
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Tigé Jedi
- Jul 2010
- 4302
- TN USA
- Ballast Sensors, Hose Sensors, IMU's, Tige SpeedSet panels and more shipping every day!
Originally posted by Duncan View PostDo you control everything with switches?
When it was switches, though, I installed an extra rocker switch mounted sideways so it was very clear to the operator which way the water was flowing. A standard "fill-off-drain" switch mounted sideways would have looked silly, so I used a water resistant black rocker. It looked great and worked great.
Also, can you modify an existing sack with a new inlet/outlet? I guess for cross pumps, you would need a top inlet and bottom outelt for each sack (but the questions remains).
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This may be getting further down the rabbit hole, but why can't you use the existing drain pumps and just add a diverter valve to fire the water into the opposite sack, rather than back out in to the lake? I think electrically controlled diverters exist.
This would save the cost if buying two more pumps.
Sent from my Z10 using Tapatalk
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Originally posted by JohnnieMo View PostThis may be getting further down the rabbit hole, but why can't you use the existing drain pumps and just add a diverter valve to fire the water into the opposite sack, rather than back out in to the lake? I think electrically controlled diverters exist.
This would save the cost if buying two more pumps.
Sent from my Z10 using TapatalkMikes Liquid Audio: Knowledge Experience Customer Service you can trust-KICKER WetSounds ACME props FlyHigh Custom Ballast Clarion LiquidLumens LEDs Roswell Wave Deflector And More
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