- Thread starter
- #11
lewisham_phil
Getting Fingers Dirty
- Joined
- Feb 18, 2008
- Messages
- 34
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Trigger, yes I did as you say, ran a few deep clean cycles with everything in situ, with the chassis elevated to observe what was happening.
There is a slight misunderstanding on the matter of blocking holes; there are actually four drain holes; the two at the front lead straight down into the waste sump, while the two towards the back lead to the purge pump. Therefore, any water placed in the purge head for the purposes of cleaning the pump, or determining whether the pump is sucking, will just run straight out the two direct drain holes. So blocking the direct drain holes allows the purge head to be filled with water, which can only be sucked away by the pump through the remaining two drain holes (or not, in my case).
I'm considering dismantling the pump, as you say Mikling, peristaltic pumps are pretty basic, although removing the purge unit assembly in order to gain access looks a little tricky..
There is a slight misunderstanding on the matter of blocking holes; there are actually four drain holes; the two at the front lead straight down into the waste sump, while the two towards the back lead to the purge pump. Therefore, any water placed in the purge head for the purposes of cleaning the pump, or determining whether the pump is sucking, will just run straight out the two direct drain holes. So blocking the direct drain holes allows the purge head to be filled with water, which can only be sucked away by the pump through the remaining two drain holes (or not, in my case).
I'm considering dismantling the pump, as you say Mikling, peristaltic pumps are pretty basic, although removing the purge unit assembly in order to gain access looks a little tricky..