In the midst of that, my mechanical common sense kicked in. I had not been terribly thorough in trying ways to prime the pump. I had assumed that whatever the problem was, that I could not figure it out without first disassembling the pump and looking at the parts.
But wait, the functioning of a diaphram pump is very simple, and obvious by just looking at the pump. It was not common sense to presume that I didn't know how it worked. There are two rubber check valves with two diaphrams between them. Either the diaphrams were cracked or the valves leaked. I felt around and determined that the diaphrams were OK by touch.
I took of the discharge hose and used my palm as a secondary check valve. Aha, within seconds I was pumping water. There was nothing wrong with the pump, more than the valves were a little dry. If I prime it once per month and keep the rubber flexible, it will be OK. I can also use my palm as a backup priming device if necessary.
I realized that having spent four decades as an analytical engineer working on the theoretical side of things made my mechanical hands-on type of common sense atrophy. Worse, my confidence eroded to the point where I presumed that I couldn't figure out how mechanical things work and presumed that I couldn't fix them. Being a volunteer fireman in recent years helped me regain part of that. Maintaining my boat will force me to restore the rest. The pump was a good object lesson.
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