Solved: CPS 1700 spraying wildly
Posted: Wed Jul 09, 2014 5:17 am
[Update: This issue was solved, just scroll down or click here: http://www.waterwar.net/site_wwn/board/ ... tml#p59041]
Hi together
This is the first time I'm writing something in this board, until now I was only an interested reader. I'm sorry for my english btw, as it is not my native language.
I've got a problem with my CPS 1700 exactly as explained in this article: http://www.sscentral.org/repairs/spraying.html
The plastic grid, which normally produces a laminar stream, is stuck sideways and sometimes changes its location so that the stream is normal again from time to time. I could even move it with some pressured air blowing in.
My question now is: How do I fix this the most secure way? The article above is not that detailed and I hesitate to saw through to nozzle tube.
I also tried to open the firing valve, but it seems to be glued pretty well together. Is this glue only on the outside, or are the contact areas of the both parts completely glued? I suppose this might be different in certain versions of the 1500/1700, because I've seen some articles in which the firing chamber was only hold together by screws, not glue.
FYI: I've got another firing valve with nozzle (CPS 1500) as a spare part, which I could use. If this could help somehow.
Thank you very much for your help!
[Update: This issue was solved, just scroll down or click here: http://www.waterwar.net/site_wwn/board/ ... tml#p59041]
Hi together
This is the first time I'm writing something in this board, until now I was only an interested reader. I'm sorry for my english btw, as it is not my native language.
I've got a problem with my CPS 1700 exactly as explained in this article: http://www.sscentral.org/repairs/spraying.html
The plastic grid, which normally produces a laminar stream, is stuck sideways and sometimes changes its location so that the stream is normal again from time to time. I could even move it with some pressured air blowing in.
My question now is: How do I fix this the most secure way? The article above is not that detailed and I hesitate to saw through to nozzle tube.
I also tried to open the firing valve, but it seems to be glued pretty well together. Is this glue only on the outside, or are the contact areas of the both parts completely glued? I suppose this might be different in certain versions of the 1500/1700, because I've seen some articles in which the firing chamber was only hold together by screws, not glue.
FYI: I've got another firing valve with nozzle (CPS 1500) as a spare part, which I could use. If this could help somehow.
Thank you very much for your help!
[Update: This issue was solved, just scroll down or click here: http://www.waterwar.net/site_wwn/board/ ... tml#p59041]