Lol thank you. Got one more for you at a bit past the 4 minute mark: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-BvuVEXlEoPs.htmlsi=lbTYR2dNn0kFIebN
@@Lukenukkem true, and for some the bypass might not be needed. But there's plenty of good reasons to have one: 1) Scheduled city pipe maintenance introducing silt into the water. Bypass allows you to save your filters from getting ruined 2) If you want to upgrade the system, the bypass will come in handy 3) If you want to have a practical pressure test with and without the filter to see if you need to replace it, bypass is useful 4) The bigger your household, the more likely you are to inconvenience someone with a filter replacement 5) Useful for general troubleshooting
@@Alicia-ig7cv we sold the house some time ago now, but the bleed through wasn't too bad before we left. But yeah, that looks like a sealing primer and it would've been an excellent idea.
Great instructions on how to de-clip all of the plastic pieces, clean'em out and put it all back together again. Still relevant and precisely the same model as mine. I didn't clean it out for couple years and there was enough gunga in there to declare a new life form found! -- Pulling this stuff apart can be an exercise in patience -- warning I broke 2 plastic clips so be very gentle. If you break off more than you can put back it will hurt in other ways...so take it slow, take some breaks, swear in an undisclosed location.
How much torque are we talking about when installing the brass NPT male into the housing? Was that 10 to 15 wraps of teflon on those threads? With Pipe thread sealant?
@@paulchulla5701 when I tightened it, I didn't have a torque value per se, just "feels tight enough", but not so much that you're using all your strength, probably unnecessary. And if I recall, yeah 10-15 with sealant. Many say that's overkill, but I figured it created less chances of a leak, and I didn't want to have to redo that part of the job, would take a very long time.
Thnx for the video awesome demonstration. My wife had this in her shopping cart for a while. She wasn’t sure until I pulled up your video. We watched your very instructive and informative video and it answered all of her questions. Immediately we purchased it. Comes in tomorrow. 👍🏼
"Oops this totally predictable routine maintenance thing happened, too bad you're locked out of spending $5 to fix it. Oh well, guess you'll have to buy another printer lmao"
Hey thanks for this awesome tutorial! The manual that came with the dishwasher has completely WRONG instructions! You helped soooo much and now I am the queen of gungalunga!!
@@JoelGarciaJaquez it turns it off for all of them I think. There's probably some way to unprogram it with the buckling technique, but I found disconnecting the battery for about 10 seconds resets it.
I'm just guessing here based on some info I found (I'm not a plumber), but it depends on a variety of factors - your location (high vs. low cost of living), whether you have a pre-existing filter loop or not, how busy your local plumbers are, which filtration system you select, what plumbing you have (PEX vs. copper vs. PVC, etc.) Anywhere from $800 to $2500, probably.
my et-2650 took a crap a couple days ago, It's gonna cost minimum of $100 to DIAGNOSE it. This printer will be taking up space at the landfill next week. Thanks Epson, you really make a great product at least for the first 2 years of its life.
Thanks for the video! Would it be better to flush the system WITHOUT the filters in to remove the flux and other stuff so you don't clog the filters or is it not worth the effort?
@@rcapra123 not a bad idea honestly! I didn't, but you could save some effort, assuming you install the bypass, by flushing before you spin the filters on.
I thought the disgusting building up was grease that was supposed to be there. 🤢 removed that, drained twice, hopefully this will help us stop getting sick so often!
Thank you very much! Very helpful video. I had problems with the clips that hold the water sprayer. Perhaps slow down a bit at that part of the video to show in more detail how one disconnects and reconnects the clips that hold this part.
Hello , you did not show the tube clips and were the pieces that came off . I'm so disappointed this is hard for the elderly to stay on the floor end complete without each step shown!
I thought you were exaggerating when you said “gelatinous Cthulu looking goo” but that’s EXACTLY what was lurking in our filter. It made a clicking noise & I thought it was alive, but it was just a bit of crinkly plastic moving when I pulled the piece out. Big shard of glass too, so thanks for the heads up!