Do these new analogue contollers have more contol over the pressure rising in the hose then the old analogue varistream.
The reason i ask this is, that i use hot water, and have the blue dial inside the old varistream, set to its lowest position, and when the flow is stopped it builds pressure for about 10 seconds or so before shutting off.
I would like a controller with a lower shut off setting, is this new one the answer
??
Hi Steven
We have had those analogue controllers mess around. If you open the contoller again (sorry) and rotate the pot adjuster clockwise and anti clockwise about 20/30 times we found that this cleans the adjusters 'tracks' which appear to oxidise over time.
This was an old electronic tip that we were told about with 'slide' volume controls on radios.
It may help although we found that the pressure cutout reduced over time.
I have noticed the digital controller behaves differently depending in what hose we use. The original minibore hose we bought was from Cleantech and my son still uses it on his 100m hose reel. It is very firm and has very little flex. So when using his hose the controller switches off virtually immediately after the tap is switched off. The problem with this hose is that you sometimes have to wait a few seconds until the controller starts the pump when you switch the tap back on.
The latest hose that I have on my hose reel is from Gardiners and it is a lot more flexible. So once the tap is switch off the same pump runs on for longer as the hose swells under the pressure and acts as a reservoir. The good thing about this hose is that there is never a time when you open the tap that you have to wait for the water at the brush head. Same pump, same Varistream, same connecting hose, same hose reel, same brush and connector - just different hose with two total different results.
If I'm experiencing this with cold water, then I have to imagine that hot will exacerbate this.
Spruce
I will try cover the points you both raise here.
It is difficult to comment on the varistream as the way it works and deals with pressure build up and DE is different to the way our controls do.
To answer Steven yes the new control will give greater control over how much pressure builds up before DE activates. This is achieved by the manual calibration switch (Left side control )
The control has to allow some pressure to build up in order to give you a flow.
1.Spruce is spot on when he comments different hose type and stiffness of the hose wall will effect this pressure build up and at what point the control stops the pump then restarts it again as DE is detected. I am not surprised to see a few seconds delay for the flow to restart this is normal.
With a stiffer hose wall the pressure will build quite quickly as the hose is not able to expand very much so the Calibration on your control would need to be adjusted to take this into account. Calibration needs to be increased slightly (less sensitive)
A softer hose wall or warm water put through will mean the hose has greater expansion the pressure builds more slowly and the calibration would also need to be a little lower than with a stiff hose. ( More sensitive)
2. Now pressure build up while in DE is a completely different animal as left unchecked for long period and with out a pump pressure switch there is a risk of high pressure build up. This time the water has no where to go so left like this it is possible for connectors to blow hoses to spilt.
The new Control reacts to pressure build up while in DE in a different way. There needs to be some pressure in the system for the control to test against, The new unit will only allow pressure to reach a point where it can test DE.
Then not increase pressure build up beyond this point, the amount of pressure to test against DE is well below the maximum.
The up shot is if you forget to turn the unit off and it sits in DE for long periods there is no risk to the connectors or hose blowing or splitting.
Hope This helps if Not feel free to drop me an email