Care Of Your Softener; Salt: Refilling Storage Tank, Salt Bridge - Kenmore 625.348321 Owner's Manual

Solid state water softener
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SECTION 3
3A.
SALT¼ 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.
PLEASE SEE PAGE 8 FOR SALT FILLING DIRECTIONS.
Sometimes, a hard crust or salt bridge forms in
the salt storage tank. It is usually caused by high
humidity or the wrong kind 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 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 FIG. 12. Make a pencil
mark on the handle, 1, or 2, below the top height
of the rim. 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 it.
If the wrong kind of salt made the bridge, take it
out. Then fill the tank with nugget or pellet salt
only.
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.
SALT BRIDGE
FIG. 12
Broom Handle
14

CARE OF YOUR SOFTENER

A SALT BRIDGE

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