Without getting into the details of the regulations an Advance must have (1) 3" bilge blower drawing air from the lower third of the bilge and ducted overboard, and a natural air intake and natural discharge originating from the lower third of the bilge/engine compartment. Most of these had a blower mounted on the engine with a short duct to the bilge on hte suction side & then ducted via hose & pvc pipe to the transom & hose behind the tank up to the vent. The natural vent starts at the forward deck vent inlet, ducted into the bilge ahead of the drivers footwell, flow through the bilge to the back and discharges through a short piece of hose behind the tank connected to the rear vent. My test for EVERY boat coming into my shop is turn the blower on & feel by hand the air discharge coming out the rear vent, if none, repair. I recently did this on a 1996 Ski Nautique & found no discharge, but the blower was running. Found the vent hose smashed under the motor mount & exhaust, been that way since new! When I was writing the annual ski boat tests for WaterSki magazine in the early 90s I would always catch at least 4-5 boats every year with inop blowers, often with polarity reversed. Adding additional ventilation is never a bad thing, just make sure the OEM system is still working properly.