On 30/12/2020 08:31, misterroy wrote:
On Tuesday, December 29, 2020 at 11:09:51 PM UTC, Max Demian wrote:
On 29/12/2020 19:36, misterroy wrote:
On Tuesday, December 29, 2020 at 7:03:04 PM UTC, Simon Templar wrote:
On 29/12/2020 18:03, misterroy wrote:
My neighbours dishwasher filled up so that when she opened the door there was a few inches of water ready to flood her kitchen floor.
I reckon it is a sensor fault. I dug about on the internet, and it suggests it is a flow meter that tells the machine how much water is in there.
( https://www.how-to-repair.com/help/b...replace-parts/ could even be the same machine)
How does the flow meter tell how much water is in there?
or I am barking up the wrong tree?
The ones I've fixed have a lever sensor which works on air in a pipe
pressure they have a pipe from the area where the water collects at the
bottom to a sensor which is usually round tucked away higher up in the
machine. If the pipe gets blocked the machine over fills and/or doesn't
empty correctly. Never seen a sensor fail it is usually a blocked pipe.
Same idea in washing machines.
That is what I thought I was looking for, but after googling does not seem to be the case.
Washing machine "engineers" call them "pressure switches".
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Max Demian
Here is an excellent washing machine "pressure switch" video https://youtu.be/baFaEvBywGc?t=851
from Secret Life of Machines. Wish he'd do an updated series.
Excellent simple and informative presentation style. Thanks for the link.