don_chuwish
Member
Oh I see, had to read a little more carefully. Still seems like it could be incorporated as part of the system, but I suppose that's not as much fun. ;-)
Oh I see, had to read a little more carefully. Still seems like it could be incorporated as part of the system, but I suppose that's not as much fun. ;-)
But this spring stay in dry side. No water inside....![]()
The one I linked is a diaphragm valve. I am asking on Amazon what the spring is made of. Though to my untrained eye it looks like mild steel. But it could be stainless just without a shine to it. Will update if I get a response back. Tomorrow I will put one on the water inlet line and verify that it will hold closed with house water pressure.
But this spring stay in dry side. No water inside....
the solenoids dont stay completly closed? or do you mean where the line connects to the solenoid leaks?
make sure the lines are cut straight. ive found out that helps alot. i got this tool and never had issues with leaks after.
http://www.bulkreefsupply.com/ro-tube-cutter-highly-recommended.html
Using a tool like that
Maybe put 90's on the lines where they're not hitting the solenoids straight on? I've had problems similar to yours before. 90's solved it.
Neat trick! I'll have to remember that.Take a small drill bit a hair larger then the ID and insert in the tubing to spread it a hair and it will seal.
The tubing OD changes from different brands slightly, so this solves the issue every time