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A Type III Marine Sanitation Device must have a closed and secured Y valve when boating on inland waters.
A Type III Marine Sanitation Device must have a closed and secured Y valve when boating on inland waters.
A Type III Marine Sanitation Device must have a closed and secured Y valve when boating on inland waters.
A closed and secured y valve
an operable marine sanitation device (MSD)
They must be 18. It doesn't matter what the legal age of consent in the state is. It could be 15, but if you are a Marine, they MUST be 18. No appeals, nada. 18 or older.
The adapter's voltage must match that of the device, and its current-rating must exceed that of the device. So the answer is yes.
The final SCSI device in the chain of devices must be terminated. If you have only one device and it's attached to a SCSI port, you must terminate that device. If you have two or more SCSI devices that are linked together and to a shared SCSI Port ie: SCSI Port, Device #1, Device #2, etc, then the final device in the 'chain' must be terminated to allow for proper recognition. The SCSI Port also requires a terminator as well.
If your marine toilet has a "Y" valve, and you are in a No DischargeY Zone, you must be certain that the Y valve is secured in a closed position
external wired peripheral device must have a corresponding that connect it back to the
If your marine toilet has a "Y" valve, and you are in a No DischargeY Zone, you must be certain that the Y valve is secured in a closed position
If your marine toilet has a "Y" valve, and you are in a No DischargeY Zone, you must be certain that the Y valve is secured in a closed position