Question 62 RVR05 - Master of LT 100 GRT

Normally, where is the potable water systems directly connected to?

A The potable water tank
B A freshwater sanitary system
C The feed-water system
D The vessel's fire-main system
AI Explanation

The Correct Answer is A **Why Option A ("The potable water tank") is correct:** Potable water systems (the network of piping and outlets delivering drinking water) must draw their supply directly from the source where the treated and stored drinking water is held. This source is specifically the potable water tank (or storage tank). The connection ensures that only safe, designated drinking water enters the distribution network. **Why Option B ("A freshwater sanitary system") is incorrect:** A freshwater sanitary system (used for toilets, non-potable washing, etc.) uses treated freshwater, but it is generally *not* treated to the standards required for drinking, cooking, and consumption. Connecting the potable system directly to the sanitary system risks contamination and violates health regulations. While the systems might both use freshwater, they must remain separate. **Why Option C ("The feed-water system") is incorrect:** The feed-water system is used to supply water to boilers for steam generation. This water must be highly purified (demineralized) to prevent scaling and corrosion in the boiler. This system's primary purpose is industrial, not consumption, and the piping or chemicals involved make it unsuitable for drinking water supply. **Why Option D ("The vessel's fire-main system") is incorrect:** The fire-main system typically uses seawater or general service freshwater (often pressurized) for fire fighting. This water is never potable (drinkable) and is often maintained under high pressure, making a direct connection impossible or extremely dangerous from a health and cross-contamination perspective.

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