We moved into Gracie about a week before leaving Mesa so we could make sure systems were working and that we had gotten everything we needed from the house, but when we got to Show Low, we found a few things that weren't working...
We also started having very low water pressure from "city" water -- this started when we were in Mesa, and we supplemented it by using the water pump to supply water from our fresh tank. It took a very long time to fill our fresh water tank -- even though water flow from the spigot was strong, we weren't getting much water into our systems from the hose. At some point in this process (I think when we ended up emptying our fresh tank while in Mesa), the auto shutoff on the water pump stopped working -- we thought it might just be due to air in the line, but usually that will resolve itself. We would like to have a working water pump so we can boondock if necessary.
Correcting this, however, did not cause our water pump to auto shutoff, so Carl did additional debugging on that. We replaced the water pump when it was not working well back in the spring of 2023 (https://journeyinamazinggrace.blogspot.com/2023/05/a-stop-in-new-jersey-seeing-cousins.html), and we thought that we had kept the old water pump (it wasn't dead, it just wasn't working as well as it should be). We were thinking that we should have a new water pump on hand...
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| ... and it turned out that both of us had forgotten that we actually got a new water pump to keep in the bay "just in case". |
Carl noticed that the new-in-the-box water pump had an inlet strainer that the installed water pump did not have. Because of the screen earlier in the system, there shouldn't be "stuff" making it through to the water pump, but he decided to go ahead and install the inlet strainer on the installed water pump. Between that and disconnecting, re-connecting the water pump, the auto-shutoff was now working -- hurrah!
He still has a plan to replace the burner nozzle on the Oasis diesel burner to see if that will help minimize the diesel smell when we're heating water, but for now, we just try to minimize when we need hot water! In Mesa it wasn't so difficult as, with 100F+ temperatures, water coming out of the tap feels pretty warm, but, in Show Low, with temperatures in the 70s, the water coming in is pretty cool.
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