How To Use Bilge pump In A Sentence
-
I don't know what a plug is and I don't know what a bilge pump is.
POW fraud leaves a trail of betrayal
-
This could be a serious curtailment to our subterranean activities, there is talk of duck boards, bilge pumps, aqualungs and horizontal drainage tunnels.
-
Then it was just a matter of how big the leak was versus the efficiency of Thorn's bilge pump.
BLACKWATER SOUND
-
With six of us now in the boat, the low transom and failed bilge pump is worrying, but we dive anyway.
-
The bilge pump would take care of the disposal problems provided the Greenpeace types weren't looking.
CORMORANT
-
Then it was just a matter of how big the leak was versus the efficiency of Thorn's bilge pump.
BLACKWATER SOUND
-
Then it was just a matter of how big the leak was versus the efficiency of Thorn's bilge pump.
BLACKWATER SOUND
-
The bilge pump would take care of the disposal problems provided the Greenpeace types weren't looking.
CORMORANT
-
The bilge pump was on the bulkhead.
-
Bilge pumps in recreational boats are only intended to remove normal accumulations of bilge water and sea spray.
-
The bilge pump would take care of the disposal problems provided the Greenpeace types weren't looking.
CORMORANT
-
During the subsequent refueling from a Naval fuel dump at that location, an electrical spark jumped from the ungrounded bilge pump to the fuel on the trailing edge of the wing, causing the edge and both ailerons to be destroyed.
-
A minute later he heard the rhythmic thump of the starboard bilge pump uniting with his own pumping.
-
One of the charter boats had to be replaced at the last minute because of a broken bilge pump.
-
The most common type of bilge pump switch uses a pivoted float to sense water level.
-
The condensers are placed at the outsides of the engine room, and the air, feed, and bilge pumps are between the engines and the condensers and worked by levers from the low-pressure engine crosshead.
Scientific American Supplement No. 819, September 12, 1891
-
The bilge pumps may have to run for hours and hours, just dealing with rain driven into a supposedly tight boat.