Care of your softener, Fig. 9 – Kenmore 625.348420 User Manual

Page 14

Advertising
background image

CARE OF YOUR SOFTENER

SECTION 3

14

3A.

SALT

REFILLING STORAGE TANK/BREAKING A SALT BRIDGE

WHEN TO REFILL WITH SALT:

Check the salt level

a few weeks after you install the softener and every

week after that. Refill when the storage tank is

about 1/3 full. Never let the softener use all the salt

before refilling. Without salt, you will soon have hard

water.

IMPORTANT:

You will have a loss in softening capacity and

may get partly hard water if less than 10

inches of salt is in the storage tank.

PLEASE SEE PAGE 9 FOR SALT FILLING DIRECTIONS.

SALT BRIDGE

Sometimes, a hard crust or salt bridge forms in the

salt storage tank. It is usually caused by high

humidity or the wrongkind of salt. When the salt

bridges, an empty space forms between the water

and salt. Then salt will not dissolve (melt) in the

water to make brine. Without brine, the resin bed

does not regenerate and you will have hard water.

If the storage tank is full of salt, it is hard to tell if you

have a salt bridge. Salt is loose on top, but the bridge

is under it. The followingis the best way to check for

a salt bridge.

Salt should be loose all the way to the bottom of the

tank. Hold a broom handle, or like tool, up to the

softener as shown in FIG. 9. Make a pencil mark on

the handle, 1

or 2

below the top height of the rim,

as shown. Then, carefully push it straight down into

the salt. If a hard object is felt before the pencil mark

gets to the top of the tank, it's most likely a salt

bridge. Carefully push into the bridge in a few places

to break it. Do not try to break the salt bridge by

pounding on the outside of the salt tank. You

may damage the tank.

If the wrongkind of salt was the cause of the bridge,

take it out. Then fill the tank with nugget or pellet salt

only.

FIG. 9

SALT BRIDGE

broom handle

push tool into salt
bridge to break

salt

salt bridge

water level

pencil

mark

1” – 2”

Advertising