
nickdrums
Hi there,
When I was preparing for winter this year, I tried to follow some advice about disconnecting the power to the fresh water pump to allow a complete drain, as this seemed easier than taking the fuse out. I found a connector sitting on top of the water tank - a bit tricky to reach, but not too bad. I pulled it apart, but as it turned out, this was not the pump electrical supply, so the pump carried on running. Since I have done this, the fresh water tank "fullness" indicator on the main control panel is now showing the Full symbol (3 lines), but it is flashing, so I expect that this is showing a tank sensor issue. I've tried having another fiddle with the connector above the tank, but no improvement - I'm pretty sure it is re-connected as it originally was. Any ideas?
As a supplementary question, I did wonder whether one of the isolator / trip switches in the rear cupboard might switch off power to the water pump which would be super easy - does anyone know?
Nick.
When I was preparing for winter this year, I tried to follow some advice about disconnecting the power to the fresh water pump to allow a complete drain, as this seemed easier than taking the fuse out. I found a connector sitting on top of the water tank - a bit tricky to reach, but not too bad. I pulled it apart, but as it turned out, this was not the pump electrical supply, so the pump carried on running. Since I have done this, the fresh water tank "fullness" indicator on the main control panel is now showing the Full symbol (3 lines), but it is flashing, so I expect that this is showing a tank sensor issue. I've tried having another fiddle with the connector above the tank, but no improvement - I'm pretty sure it is re-connected as it originally was. Any ideas?
As a supplementary question, I did wonder whether one of the isolator / trip switches in the rear cupboard might switch off power to the water pump which would be super easy - does anyone know?
Nick.