RJM62
Touchdown! Greaser!
- Joined
- Jun 15, 2007
- Messages
- 13,157
- Location
- Upstate New York
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Geek on the Hill
I have a dishwasher. A machine, that is, not a person. A Maytag Performa, to be exact. It hasn't worked in almost two years, but because it was a low priority, I just today decided to fix it.
But when I pushed the button this time, it worked.
I have tried to start it dozens of times in the past two years, and it never worked. So why now?
There are two water-related things that have transpired in that time. The first was a couple of months ago, when I had to get the well pump replaced. The water, of course, was shut off for a few hours while that was being done.
The second was today, and I think this may be the answer, although it's still puzzling to me. The neighbor's kid is taking some course to be certified to test water (for a private company, not for a government license), and yesterday he tested mine for practice. The cold water was fine, but he found low levels of bacteria in the hot water.
He then found that the water temp was 114 F, which he said was too low for safety; so he had me turn up the temperature as hot as it will go and told me to leave it there for 24 hours, then flush the tank, refill it, and set it to 120.
Okey dokey, I said. And then after work today, I was inspired to fix the dishwasher. I suspected that there may have been some gunk in the inlet filter so I decided to pull it out and clean it.
But when I pushed the button, it worked.
Would the low water temperature have caused the machine to do nothing at all when the button was pressed? Some sort of warning, I could understand. But nothing at all? There was no water flow at all before. The power light lit, but that was all.
It doesn't make much sense to me that it would do nothing because even if the heater had been set at a higher temperature, the water in the hose at the inlet would still be room temp unless the machine had just been used. So low temp on the inlet shouldn't have caused it to do nothing at all. I'd think it would have to run long enough to get hot water in the line before deciding that it wasn't hot enough.
It does have a heater in it, if that means anything.
Thanks,
-Rich
But when I pushed the button this time, it worked.
I have tried to start it dozens of times in the past two years, and it never worked. So why now?
There are two water-related things that have transpired in that time. The first was a couple of months ago, when I had to get the well pump replaced. The water, of course, was shut off for a few hours while that was being done.
The second was today, and I think this may be the answer, although it's still puzzling to me. The neighbor's kid is taking some course to be certified to test water (for a private company, not for a government license), and yesterday he tested mine for practice. The cold water was fine, but he found low levels of bacteria in the hot water.
He then found that the water temp was 114 F, which he said was too low for safety; so he had me turn up the temperature as hot as it will go and told me to leave it there for 24 hours, then flush the tank, refill it, and set it to 120.
Okey dokey, I said. And then after work today, I was inspired to fix the dishwasher. I suspected that there may have been some gunk in the inlet filter so I decided to pull it out and clean it.
But when I pushed the button, it worked.
Would the low water temperature have caused the machine to do nothing at all when the button was pressed? Some sort of warning, I could understand. But nothing at all? There was no water flow at all before. The power light lit, but that was all.
It doesn't make much sense to me that it would do nothing because even if the heater had been set at a higher temperature, the water in the hose at the inlet would still be room temp unless the machine had just been used. So low temp on the inlet shouldn't have caused it to do nothing at all. I'd think it would have to run long enough to get hot water in the line before deciding that it wasn't hot enough.
It does have a heater in it, if that means anything.
Thanks,
-Rich
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