Rudy
Active member
In thirty years in this business, I've never seen this.
I have a single Cat 1010 that supplies my spot free water to my 3 Self Serve bays via 3 solenoids.
I noticed that the pump sounded slightly rougher than normal. The output (and also bypass) hose was pulsating somewhat. I brushed my arm against the Paraplate BR5 pressure regulator, and WOW. It was almost hot enough to burn me. You couldn't hold your hand against it.
The water in the bypass hose was indeed hot.
The oil level in the pump was right on the mark.
I let the pump cool....and could not duplicate the problem.
The pump was running cool. The exit water was ambient, and the water exiting the wand was also ambient temperature.
The ONLY thing I can guess......could a customer have been using the Spot Free Rinse for an extended amount of time, without having the trigger gun full on? That would cause an excessive amount of bypass for a long time.
Other than that, I don't have a clue.
Ideas?
I have a single Cat 1010 that supplies my spot free water to my 3 Self Serve bays via 3 solenoids.
I noticed that the pump sounded slightly rougher than normal. The output (and also bypass) hose was pulsating somewhat. I brushed my arm against the Paraplate BR5 pressure regulator, and WOW. It was almost hot enough to burn me. You couldn't hold your hand against it.
The water in the bypass hose was indeed hot.
The oil level in the pump was right on the mark.
I let the pump cool....and could not duplicate the problem.
The pump was running cool. The exit water was ambient, and the water exiting the wand was also ambient temperature.
The ONLY thing I can guess......could a customer have been using the Spot Free Rinse for an extended amount of time, without having the trigger gun full on? That would cause an excessive amount of bypass for a long time.
Other than that, I don't have a clue.
Ideas?