Mariowar, There is no gasket req'd for the heater element.If you can just tighten it enough to stop the leak that would be the simplist. The brew boiler is just hanging in place by the big thermosyphon upper and lower tubes going to the g/h. If you don't have a good hold on the boiler, you will tweak the plumbing and the position of the boiler. I got leaks too, and removed the boilers from the machine to work on things. I bought a large channel lok to hold the boiler when tightening or removing anything threaded. Dennis
-----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of mariowar Sent: Sunday, February 28, 2010 3:35 AM To: Brewtus Subject: Re: Leak John, the only thing that I did different was to drain the brew boiler ( through the group)while I was draining the steam boiler. I have a Vibe Pump and I always made sure that I would run it for about 45 seconds and a 45 second rest. I am stil able to pull shots, however, as soon as the element on the brew boiler kicks in, it leaks through the element nut. Obviously, while I am pulling a shot it gets worst. I am just trying to understand what went wrong in the descaling process..... and I wonder if the heating element has a gasket.... My machine is 14 months old and WLL warranty expired and they have been very nice. The good news is that I have an extended warranty through American Express and I could have it fixed here in Houston . Therefore, I want to make sure if in order to remove the element, the boiler has to be removed from the machine because if that is the case I would rather to get a new boiler..... The heating element is very hard to tighten or remove the because I have to hold the boiler at the same time. I even unsucessfully tried with an of oil wrench holding it..... My machine also has those big holes under both boilers, however, ths situation would be the same. How to securely hold the boiler while you try either to remove or tighten the heating element? On Feb 27, 4:57 pm, mariowar <[email protected]> wrote: > I descaled my Brewtus III with Dezcal following John Brinkman's > instructions : > > Steam Boiler > At operating temp > > 1. Switch machine off > 2. Open water tap to remove as much water as possible from steam > boiler, close tap again 3. Disconnect water level sensor (pull the > wire off) 4. Open steam wand 5. Turn machine on, takes quite a while > for the pump to fill up the steam boiler, water will start coming out > of the steam tip when it is full 6. Switch off machine 7. Reconnect > water level sensor 8. Switch machine on 9. Leave at operating temp for > 1hr 10. repeat > > However, on step # 2 I Also got water out the group ( intervals of 1 > minute), until no more water got out draining the brew boiler > too.............. > On step 5, after turning the machine on , after around 30 seconds > there was a burn rubber smell for about 10 seconds, the the auto fill > kicked and I continued the descaling process. > At the end I run some of the water ith descaler through the brew head > and I noticed that it had way less scale than the steam bolier which > had around 2 8 ounce glasses of yellow water until the water became > cristal clear. > > At the end I got a leak underneath the brew boiler's element ( around > the nut).... > Could be the element's gasket? I wonder if it is possible to take > the element out without taking the boiler out of the machine........ > > Have you experienced something like it? -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Brewtus" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected]. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/brewtus?hl=en. -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Brewtus" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected]. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/brewtus?hl=en.
