I have a 2000 X-22 with the factory ballast sack in the trunk, the seacock in bilge area in front of battery and the Rule 1100 pump in storage under glove box. What I just started noticing late this summer is that a decent amount of water is leaking onto the carpet below the pump in the storage compartment. If I go out multiple days in a row, or for a really long day, it's enough water to soak the carpet in the storage and it seeps out to the carpet at the feet of the passenger seating area. I hooked up a fake-a-lake to the thru hull pickup for the seacock/ballast and ran water through and it didn't appear to be leaking when running the pump or with pump off, so I'm beginning to doubt it's a leaky pump. Pump is barely 2 years old.
Then yesterday, we went out onto the lake, kept the seacock valve shut the entire time and never ran the pump. When we got home, I checked the area to see if it was wet and it was. Now I'm stumped. We had the pump off and the seacock valve shut, how could it be wet on the carpet under the pump? It was dry before we went out. Is it possible that the small amount of water in the ballast sack somehow vacuumed forward and leaked through the pump? That seems like a stretch.
My other curiosity is it's somehow related to water in between the layers of the hull/bilge liner? I've heard there can be water in between those layers and have confirmed that on my boat. Do those layers or that liner have a junction that meets in the area where I have my leak? So bizarre.