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Kenmore 625.388260 UltraSoft 250 Problem
#1
Posted 13 April 2010 - 05:56 PM
Also, after it does try to regeneration, the next morning the tap water is super super salty. It goes away after someone takes a shower. Any ideas?
Thanks,
Jimmy
#2
Posted 13 April 2010 - 06:07 PM
one of my video productions: “Easter Seals: Walk With Me”
every day is Down Syndrome Awareness Day
"A Child Is Waiting" . Burt Lancaster . Judy Garland . 1962
RegUS_PatOff > www.youtube.com/watch?v=oPAY2LsKVEw
#3
Posted 13 April 2010 - 06:51 PM
Part #'s - rotor=7199232, seal kit=7129716
they don't show up on RepairClinic, might try Sears, or Ecowater
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#4
Posted 13 April 2010 - 08:28 PM
not listed at Repair Clinic
7199232 Rotor
click on picture
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=220317348157
7129716 Seal Kit
click on picture
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=220478480634
one of my video productions: “Easter Seals: Walk With Me”
every day is Down Syndrome Awareness Day
"A Child Is Waiting" . Burt Lancaster . Judy Garland . 1962
RegUS_PatOff > www.youtube.com/watch?v=oPAY2LsKVEw
#5
Posted 14 April 2010 - 04:50 PM
Thanks,
Jimmy
#6
Posted 14 April 2010 - 04:54 PM
Also, avoid messin with the factory settings for rise times etc. in the controller, some high foreheads lost many hours of sleep determining what was required there
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#7
Posted 17 April 2010 - 01:36 PM
When I put the valve back together, I see most places say just hand tighten the screws with a screw driver. My screws are so tight it is hard to tighten by hand. When you tighten the valve, should the top of the valve body make contact with the bottom? I used a 1/4" ratchet and tightened the screws in a crossing pattern, until I just touched the bottom of the valve body. Is this too tight? I just took the motor off and I can turn the cam/rotor by hand, it is firm but it turns.
One thing I did when I put the softener in (7 years ago) was to plumb valves in on my inlet copper line, outlet copper line, and then a valve on the bypass copper line. From there I ran a copper line to my inlet and one to my outlet on the water softener bypass valve. But my water connection points are above the water softener. To make my connection work, I turned the plastic bypass valve upside down to allow me to connect to the lines above. Would this cause any problems? It has worked in the past but just checking.
#8
Posted 17 April 2010 - 05:04 PM
You can tighten up the valve cap, but don't really tourque it down or it will bind - 1/4" ratchet is exactly what I use with just a nice pull.
If you have suction at the outlet of the venturi then when you connect the brinevalve hose, the water should draw from the tank unless the brinevalve is caked in sludgy salt or the salt is bridged in the tank.
you can pull the brinevalve up from the tank and disassemble the float etc, so that you expose the bottom end of the hose, then advance the unit into brinedraw and unplug it so it stays in brinedraw - you should feel suction at the end of the hose - lower it into the water which is built up in your storagetank until it's gone - if you have a heavy buildup of sludge - keep it drawing out and continue to add hot water to dissolve it.
The slow water running to the drain in brinedraw swirls through the nozzle/venturi and is what causes the suction.
Also, if the valve is not tightened down enough, water will get in the channel under the spider gasket, this channel should be thoroughly cleaned and dried prior to placing the gasket in place - if necessary, disassemble and check. Don't be afraid to use the silicone grease supplied in the kit to lubricate the lower part of the rotor
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#9
Posted 17 April 2010 - 06:53 PM
I did pull the brinevalve out and tested it when filling the salt tank, it worked. THen I put it into brine, and I put it in a bucket of water and pull it out and could see the water go down into the valve, sucking it out.
Guess worst case, I could put my shop vac hose in there and suck the water out to see if maybe there is alot of sludge.
The water that was draining when in the brine cycle, wasn't real salty, if at all. From what I was seeing in how it works, the supply water is what creates the suction and then mixes with the brine??
Again, thanks for all of your help.
Jimmy
#10
Posted 17 April 2010 - 08:05 PM
A shop Vac is a quick and easy way to clean out the tank and brinewell, good work!
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#11
Posted 18 April 2010 - 04:39 PM
I had about 140 lbs of salt in my tank still. So I did use my shop vac to remove the salt and the 10" of water in the tank. When I got all of the salt out, I found I had nearly a 4 inchs of solid salt in the bottom. I used warm water and small iron rod to break up the salt. I removed everything from the tank. Then I ran the softener through a cycle, and it put the water level back down to about 1 inch. So I put 120 lbs of new salt in and have it scheduled to regenerate tonight. Will see what it does in the morning.
#12
Posted 18 April 2010 - 08:13 PM
So I put 120 lbs of new salt in
Why so much ? 1 or 2 bags is enough at one time, you just add it a little more often - filling it to the brim only promotes bridging and sludging
Set it so it regenerates when nobody will use water at all during the regeneration (full cycle approx. 2 hrs)
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#13
Posted 19 April 2010 - 04:25 AM
I got up this morning, and my water level in the salt tank is 2.5" which is where it should be. So it seemed to work. Have to work through using all of the hot water so it can be replinished with the soft water. Hopefully all is good now.
Thanks for all of your help...
JImmy
#14
Posted 19 April 2010 - 06:50 AM
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