Ok guys for those of you who are curious there is really no need to change anything on your front plumbing unless you are like me and have a little ocd about draining two separate cavities out of the same hole. If it doesn't bother you when you drain one and the other is empty, use both pumps anyway, these pumps are designed to be able to hold up to being run dry so it will not hurt them, the only parts in them that make contact are the brushes on the motor and the shaft to seal. If you would like to hook up your drains individually you can do as I did and start by removing the footwell below the steering wheel. Grab some towels because the fiberglass will be all over you in no time. You will need some cutters and a few zipties, look for the 3 outlets and find the Y connector, disconnect the 2 hoses going to it and set them aside. next remove the other hoses one at a time(so you don't get them mixed up with the drains) and route them to the Y, You will have to cut a few zipties holding the hoses together and do a little shaking around to find the right amount of length. after you get that done hook up the first two you took off of the Y to each separate outlet that is left. For the last step that I did was to prevent the overflow from backflowing into the bag was to locate the hose(on the Y) that goes directly left and through a vertical passage in the footwell below the heater outlet, this is the vent for the front pnp bag, disconnect it and follow it under the chillax seat to the top of the bag to make sure it is the pnp bag vent, right at the Y put in a 3/4 check valve just like the one you put on the fill pump side of this bag, making sure you can NOT blow air toward the bag. This will prevent water from entering the bag if you only want to use the hard tank and not the bag. You will now be able to drain each individually without water cross feeding from one to the other. Just be cautious to only put the check valve on the bag vent, if you put it on the hard tank vent it will allow you to fill the tank but you will not be able to drain it unless your boat is out of the water, it will let air out for the vent but will not let air in when you drain, effectively creating a vacuum on the tank, and possibly damage or crack the tank, if you do this and try to drain in the water you will either see nothing happen because of the vacuum, or it will keep on draining forever because its sucking it in through the fill pump. This is how I have my boat plumbed but it really isn't necessary unless you just go crazy thinking about having to run 2 pumps to drain one ballast, but it makes it so that if you only want to use the hard tank in the floor the water doesn't find a way into the bag when filling or draining. Oh ya and grab a pair of your wife's pantyhose and use it in the shower to remove all of the fiberglass stuck in you after attempting this pointless hose routing, just use it like a scotchbrite pad on dirty dishes and don't be gentle, wear it like a glove and get to scrubbing, if you don't have any you will wish you had in a few hours.
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