Glad you got it fixed. It looks like the hose is on plenty far enough with the clamp. Mep already mentioned it, but I was going to tell you that I noticed that check valve is going to take more vacuum pressure to pull it open! It has a little higher cracking pressure than the check valves that are on it. Well, you got some experience on it!Well I was able to get the job done, not without a half gallon of sweat (Houston us pretty hot rn) few dozen muscle cramps and a bunch of swearing. The check valve stem fell apart with a touch. Got frustrated with a tight fitting and cut the hose off, regretted that as I needed the length and couldn't get the hose fully back on the barb. I got it as good as I could and hose clamped it. Everything works! If that connection goes bad at least it sticks out as something to correct. Thanks MEP! You the man!
That’s the first thing I noticed in the picture!I would not have recommended that check valve, but I have seen it used and it doesn't seem to be a problem. It just has a pretty tight spring, but you may not have to throttle back the valve to force the pump to draw soap.
I noticed that it took a good amount of force to open that valve. At least that one isn't cranked down so hard now, much quicker to get off and get to 3 and 5 now as well.I would not have recommended that check valve, but I have seen it used and it doesn't seem to be a problem. It just has a pretty tight spring, but you may not have to throttle back the valve to force the pump to draw soap.
I also have some of those short check valves I think they are 0 cracking pressure, are those ok to use also?I would not have recommended that check valve, but I have seen it used and it doesn't seem to be a problem. It just has a pretty tight spring, but you may not have to throttle back the valve to force the pump to draw soap.
I use these:
Kleen-Rite 944-430 | Brass Inline Check Valve | 1/2in. F x F
This resilient disc check valve is not lead free. It is not for use on potable applications.www.kleen-ritecorp.com
They flow plenty for a bay pump, they have a weaker spring than the high pressure 3/4" you installed, but still gives enough drag where you shouldn't have to throttle the water supply. I've had no problems with failure since the spring and seal are 100% captive.
If the short ones you have are these, I wouldn't use them. They just don't hold up.
Yeah, I didn't remove the hoses first and it was so tight I ended up to where I couldn't get in the right position to loosen it and just cut the hose out of frustration. Funny how I was finished and never wanted to do that again and now I'm thinking on swapping it haha. It does work so I should probably invest sweat equity elsewhere.My guess would be they ordered some for where you needed one and thought they were the right size. They do work perfectly by moving the reducing nipple from the bottom of the check valve to the top and adding a 1/2" nipple to the bottom. For future reference, the fitting with the hose on it unscrews from the flare fitting above it so you don't have to cut the hose.
That does sounds similar to what my bay was doing that I replaced the rotary on. If going from wax to rinse worked reliably but foam brush to rinse didn't the switch is what it seems to point to.@MEP001
I have similar problem but a little different from KFPanda. As I turn to FOAM Brush back to RINSE, RINSE will not turn on (pump didn't turn on; no starving; water coming out @35psi) RINSE works when I switch to WAX then back to Rinse. Avoid switching to FOAM BRUSH, switching between other soaps is fine (RINSE and FOAM are next to each other). Is the rotary switch wiring went bad? I have replaced the bottom check valves. No tube leaks (haven't checked/replaced fitting for tube lines)
This is the best check valve to use on a Coleman unit. They have a very low failure rate, zero in my experience, and have just enough drag from the spring that you usually don't have to throttle the flow with the ball valve to force it to draw soap.KF Panda you can get those check valves at the big box hardware stores over by the well pump supplies.
Did you check/replace supply lines to pump inlet?So it's not the rotary switch. I've been digging for the problem but no luck.
- replace 2 check valves under the pump
- replace 2 sus fittings
- open/clean soap solenoid
- open the pump head, look through seals they all look good (didn't changed new seals)
- change pump's oil (still see some air bubbles on top)
From the start it runs great for good 3, 4 minutes. As switching to other options, go back to rinse,Wax, soap pressure drops. Turn to low pressure, then back to high pressure the weeping build pressure, but drop pressure as I squeeze the trigger. Pump runs great without shaking or starving BUT the pump head gets hot quick (looks like overworked). One thing I know it's somewhere out there air gets into the pump because air bubbles coming out when I open pump head's plug. So frustrating. Should I go ahead replace new head seals?