Refilling With Salt; Breaking A Salt Bridge - EcoWater Calex 11 Installation And Operating Manual

Table of Contents

Advertisement

Water Softener Maintenance

REFILLING WITH SALT

Brine (salt dissolved in water) is needed for every
regeneration. The water for making brine is metered
into the salt storage area by the softener valve and
timer. If the water softener uses all the salt before
more is added, hard water will result. Lift the brine
tank lid and check the salt level every week. Be sure
that the brinewell cover is on when adding salt.
NOTE: In humid areas it is best to keep the salt level
less than half full and refill more often.
RECOMMENDED SALT: Cube, pellet, coarse solar,
etc., water softener salt is recommended. This type
of salt is high purity evaporated crystals, sometimes
formed and pressed into briquets. It has less than
1% insoluble (not dissolvable in water) impurities.
Clean, high grade rock salts are acceptable, but may
require frequent brine tank cleaning to remove the
"sludge" residue (insolubles) collecting at the bottom
of the tank.
SALT NOT RECOMMENDED: Rock salt high in
impurities, block, granulated, table, ice melting, or ice
cream making salts, etc., are not recommended.
SALT WITH IRON REMOVING ADDITIVE: Some
salts have an additive to help a water softener handle
iron in the water supply. Although this may help keep
the resin bed clean, it may also release corrosive
fumes that will weaken and shorten the life of some
water softener electronic parts.

BREAKING A SALT BRIDGE

Sometimes a hard crust or salt "bridge" forms in the
brine tank. This is usually caused by high humidity
or the wrong kind of salt. When the salt bridges, an
empty space forms between the water and the salt.
Then salt will not dissolve in the water to make brine.
Without brine, the resin bed is not recharged and
hard water will result.
If the storage tank is full of salt, it is difficult to tell
whether there is a salt bridge. A bridge may be
underneath loose salt. The following is 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 Figure 16. Make a pencil mark
on the handle 25 to 50 mm below the top of the rim.
Then, carefully push it straight down into the salt. If
a hard object is felt before the pencil mark is even
with the top, it is most likely a salt bridge. Carefully
push into the bridge in several 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.
Push tool into
salt bridge
to break
25 - 50 mm
Pencil Mark
Broom
Handle
8
Salt
Salt Bridge
Empty Space
Water Level
FIG. 16

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading
Need help?

Need help?

Do you have a question about the Calex 11 and is the answer not in the manual?

This manual is also suitable for:

Calex 15Calex 17Calex 22

Table of Contents