So I made a Sak yesterday, and just as it was finishing, it alarmed a "No Flow" alarm (don't remember the #).So I look at the sak and it is inflated like a balloon. I had to actually stab it with a knife to let air out so I could pull the drawer out. Since there was a problem, I tried to drain the sak and it wouldn't drain. Not the control head, it did all the normal things like it was draining, but no fluid was draining. I now have a hose leading to my bath tub so I can syphon the fluid out.
I never shut the door off my Pureflow cabinet, because I make sure that I pull all lines up and outside of the cabinet. That seems to have cure the problem of them getting pinched by the bag while making the batch. Someone suggested taping the green lines to the cabinet, but this is essentially an easier fix even than that.
Quote from: amanda100wilson on July 11, 2014, 06:22:39 PMI never shut the door off my Pureflow cabinet, because I make sure that I pull all lines up and outside of the cabinet. That seems to have cure the problem of them getting pinched by the bag while making the batch. Someone suggested taping the green lines to the cabinet, but this is essentially an easier fix even than that. I use to leave the lines hanging outside the tub, too when making a batch. I didn't want any of the lines getting pinched off by the SAK as it filled but...it bothered me that the manual said to drape the lines on the inside of the tub. I finally decided to just drape the lines on the inside of the tub because we make our batches overnite while we sleep and I'd sure hate to have a leak going on that I couldn't get to in time before the living room gets flooded. If the lines should leak, at least they'd leak inside the tub and not all over the carpet, which in the apartment we live in looks bad enough!
Quote from: PrimeTimer on July 12, 2014, 12:24:33 AMQuote from: amanda100wilson on July 11, 2014, 06:22:39 PMI never shut the door off my Pureflow cabinet, because I make sure that I pull all lines up and outside of the cabinet. That seems to have cure the problem of them getting pinched by the bag while making the batch. Someone suggested taping the green lines to the cabinet, but this is essentially an easier fix even than that. I use to leave the lines hanging outside the tub, too when making a batch. I didn't want any of the lines getting pinched off by the SAK as it filled but...it bothered me that the manual said to drape the lines on the inside of the tub. I finally decided to just drape the lines on the inside of the tub because we make our batches overnite while we sleep and I'd sure hate to have a leak going on that I couldn't get to in time before the living room gets flooded. If the lines should leak, at least they'd leak inside the tub and not all over the carpet, which in the apartment we live in looks bad enough!We drape them outside and have never had a leak in over 2 years. It is easier to avoid pinching lines that way.
I'd sure hate to have a leak going on that I couldn't get to in time before the living room gets flooded.
QuoteI'd sure hate to have a leak going on that I couldn't get to in time before the living room gets flooded.I had a sak where the small .2 micron filter on the line with the blue clamps leaked from the seam. NxStage sent a mailer to pick up the sak, and I have never had that exact problem with another sak since - but I always check the lines for leaks a few minutes after starting a batch.
Oh no! Another thing (the micron filter) for me to check! lol By the way, guess I really should go back and read the manual because...I keep the green clamp before the micron filter clamped while a batch is being made until I'm ready to "prime the line" for treatment. Not correct?? I gotta get out that darn manual!
Quote from: PrimeTimer on July 13, 2014, 11:15:49 PMOh no! Another thing (the micron filter) for me to check! lol By the way, guess I really should go back and read the manual because...I keep the green clamp before the micron filter clamped while a batch is being made until I'm ready to "prime the line" for treatment. Not correct?? I gotta get out that darn manual!I wouldn't worry about the green clamps. The liquid does not travel down that line until you start using it for treatment. That line is actually blocked off in the control head while the sak is being made.
Quote from: Simon Dog on July 13, 2014, 11:05:18 PMQuoteI'd sure hate to have a leak going on that I couldn't get to in time before the living room gets flooded.I had a sak where the small .2 micron filter on the line with the blue clamps leaked from the seam. NxStage sent a mailer to pick up the sak, and I have never had that exact problem with another sak since - but I always check the lines for leaks a few minutes after starting a batch. Oh no! Another thing (the micron filter) for me to check! lol By the way, guess I really should go back and read the manual because...I keep the green clamp before the micron filter clamped while a batch is being made until I'm ready to "prime the line" for treatment. Not correct?? I gotta get out that darn manual!