OK, we've established I have to get a real holding tank on the boat and get rid of the 1977 era Type 1 head. Going to do a custom installation, what size holding tank would you recommend? Our last boat (sailboat) had a 15 gallon tank and it seemed to be enough, but we never stayed on the hook like we plan to do now. Thanks for the input.
Average human daily output is about 1/2 to 2/3 gallon including solids.
Average flush volume is about 1/2 gallon ( electric or light manual flushing).
Figure 10 flushes per day per person = 5 gallons of flush water/day/person.
Aggressive manual pumping will increase that volume.
So, a good guesstimate is each person aboard will fill up your holding tank to the tune of 5-1/2 gallons plus per day.
Now you can figure how many people and how many days in a non-discharge location you need to plan for and compute minimum tank size.
In this situation "bigger is definitely better"!!!
Then unfortunately you have to compromise to what you can fit on your boat!!!
Thanks for the input. I just do happen to have a lot of available space down below in the engineering spaces. I was contemplating 30 gallons or so.
Unless where you boat -- ever, always -- a No Discharge Zone (didn't see an answer to that in the other thread), and if money isn't tight, I'd consider a Raritan Hold 'N' Treat system, with as big a holding tank as you can fit.
In any case, I can tell you our 40 gallon tank (so labeled) actually holds more like 26 gallons -- partly because of the placement of the innies and the outies, partly because of the thickness of the sidealls, perhaps due to some creative labeling on the part of the manufacturer.
And I can tell you that the two of us can fill that rascal up in about 4-5 days. That's with generous freshwater flushing, to manage scale build-up in the toilet discharge line. Still, even with minimal flushing, 6-7 days would have us looking for a pump out.
If your pump out station all charge only $5/shot, it would take longer to amortize the cost of the treatment system... but our normal place wasn't State subsidized, so they charge a portion of what they in turn are charged to pump their on-shore holding tank out... which means we usually pay $15/visit. Plus tips. At that rate, a Hold 'N' Treat system could pay for itself in a year or two... depending on your "rate of deposit" (so to speak).
Back to size, whichever way you go... as big as you can fit. Which means getting it in the door, into the boat, into the space, reachable for plumbing access, etc.
-Chris