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AJO

Feb 15, 2019
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Hi all

I moved into a new house last year and under the kitchen sink the pipework has what looks like 2 filter connections but I have never seen these before and having ploughed through the internet I can't find any products that look similar. Even went into a couple of stores including Selco and Wickes asked staff and no one had a clue.

Does anyone know what they are? I want to know if its something that needs regular replacement, new parts etc.

Thanks

Plumping 1.jpg
Plumping 2.jpg
 
Thank you. So they just stay attached permanently and no regular action is needed for them. Thought they were some sort of water filters and softener. Oh well.
 
Thank you. So they just stay attached permanently and no regular action is needed for them. Thought they were some sort of water filters and softener. Oh well.

As the guys have said it's an anti-flood device. There is hose within a hose and if the inner hose bursts, the outer hose fills with water eventually reaching that "control box" looking thing which has some kind of float valve I believe and that shuts off the supply to the leaky hose within.
 
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Also incorporates a scale reducer.

Really, Can you prove this? I don’t see any manufacturer wasting money on snake oil products... as the only scale reducer small enough to fit, would be a magnetic item

Where’s the whistling emoji
 
Also incorporates a scale reducer.

One of the reason I thought it might by a water softener is that when I first moved in the water was clear. Washing glasses and cutlery left no water stains which I used to get a lot in my old house in the same area. Its a very hard water region. Now seem to get more and more water stains which us why i thought it maybe something that needed replacement/new filter etc.

Can't quite work out why the water seemed the first few months but now hard again. How can i confirm if it has a scale reducer?
 
Can't quite work out why the water seemed the first few months but now hard again. How can i confirm if it has a scale reducer?
I think you will find dishwashers have built in softeners, which is why you have to put salt in them. Try using rinse aid.
 
I think you will find dishwashers have built in softeners, which is why you have to put salt in them. Try using rinse aid.

The clear glasses and cutlery was from normal tap washing so that mystery is still there.

Thanks all.
 
The clear glasses and cutlery was from normal tap washing so that mystery is still there.

If you are describing glasses that have gone 'cloudy' after washing in a dishwasher, try soaking a sample in warm vinegar for about 20 minutes.

If it comes out shiny then the problem was limescale due hard water and you just need to have a session vinegar-treating all your glasses.

If it's still cloudy the glass has been attacked (etched/corroded) by the dishwasher chemicals you are using. You can get formulations that claim not to do this but I don't think that the damage already done is reversible.
 

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