Waxman
Super Moderator
any update??
Not yet. I went by yesterday and switched my active softener tank. It's been rainy and slow, so have not washed two cars back to back since then. It seemed to fill slightly faster, but I couldn't tell for sure. If I was two vehicles in a row and it keeps up, then the softener was the issue.any update??
Did the flow stay good directly after the solenoid without any other plumbing attached?Yes. I honestly don't think there is anything I have not tried. Spent over 10 hours trying to pin it down.
Did you try this valve in another razor?Yep. Tried a valve from another Razor.
So you have continuous full flow before the solenoid and low flow after a short period of time after the solenoid? Both with and without the guts in the solenoid? I'm trying to follow where you are having full flow and where it is dropping off after some time. Maybe worth putting inline pressure gauges to diagnose? Just throwing out ideas here.I did test the water flow with all guts of solenoid removed, and also installed a brand new solenoid, so I've tried both of those items. The hose is a solid pipe running very close to it, then a thick hose only a short distance and no kinks. Next rainy day I'm going to swap the complete solenoid with another Razor just to see. Then I can 100% rule out the solenoid if it works fine on the other.
It's a very confusing situation as it's hard to pin down why the flow slows down. I'm sure I'll figure it out soon. Very rainy month here, so have not had a line of cars in a while.So you have continuous full flow before the solenoid and low flow after a short period of time after the solenoid? Both with and without the guts in the solenoid? I'm trying to follow where you are having full flow and where it is dropping off after some time. Maybe worth putting inline pressure gauges to diagnose? Just throwing out ideas here.
Maybe not, but it's plumbed that way. Regardless, I found my water to be hard, so I have to fix the softeners anyway.but is the softener absolutely necessary on the rinse tank? I know at my car wash only the heated water is softened. The water that fills my rinse tank comes from two places: the city water supply and my well water.
Just an FYI most people in my state will run soft water for chemicals only. Use hard for rinse passes. Not only does it save a ton on salt but the hard water breaks down the foam from previous chemical passes quicker and better then soft water.
How hard is the water there typically? We have 18 grains and run all softened currently. We also have turbo nozzles and those are already high maintenance. I wonder if they would get stuck more often with 18 grain hard water.
I think my other washes are plumbed to run city water to the rinse. I'll have to check. Water at this wash was at 11 grains hard, so definitely needs to be soft. I'm surprised cars were still coming out clean with the softener not working.Just an FYI most people in my state will run soft water for chemicals only. Use hard for rinse passes. Not only does it save a ton on salt but the hard water breaks down the foam from previous chemical passes quicker and better then soft water.