I have a rancilio z11 espresso machine it is acting up I at first though it was the fill rod in the sight glass as the machine shut down because it had to much water, would not make steam so i drained and turned back on and I have been watching the water level, the level in the sight glass goes up slowly (if you are not using the machine) however the pump does not come on. If you pull a shot of espresso the pump comes on a goes off as soon as ths shot is finished.. I have also noticed if you steam something when you are done steaming you can watch the water level drop if it drops below the bottom of the rod the pump comes on but again goes off when it touches the bottom of the rod. Any ideas what would cause this any help would be appericated thank you Kathy
Tags:
Will the site glass fill up even if the machine is turned off but the water is left on? The seal in the fill valve could be damaged and is letting water by. That would require a valve rebuild and a new seal. There could also be a small amount of debris in the valve which would require some cleaning. You'd need to take the valve apart either way. OTOH, often times machines will have a manual fill valve located under the drip tray and that valve could be open very slightly. You might be able to clear the problem by opening and then shutting the manual fill. Otherwise you'll have to call a tech to rebuild the fill valve. (if that is the problem)
Well ,luckily, there are only so many ways for water to get into the steam tank. Maybe the spring on the back of the fill plunger is getting weak and allows the fill valve to open a little when the pump kicks in when you pull a shot. If this were the case the water level would only creep up when you were useing the machine and pulling shots and would remain constant when not pulling shots.
So, based on Brady's input and re-reading your first post, I'm guessing that the fill probe is in the sight glass and is filling the tank based on the level in the glass...
Not familiar with the Z11 autofill circuit. In our area, we have lots of S20-era machines and lots of Classe machines, nothing in between.
Agreed with what Mike said about checking the fill valve seal and seat. May be time for a new fill valve, but maybe not... The key is determining what the water is actually doing inside the boiler, and how accurately the sightglass is reading it.
Bizarre behavior of water in the sightglass can be caused by scale buildup in the lower sightglass tube. I've seen several instances where either the tube leading to the sightglass or the port on the boiler that this tube connects to are plugged solid with buildup. This would cause the water level in the glass to lag behind the true boiler water level - showing either more or less water than you actually have in the boiler. With sightglass-based fill sensors (like on the Rancilio Classe machines) this can cause an overfill and underfill situation. A Classe 10 I worked on about a year ago had this happen - clearing the lower sightglass tube fixed the problem.
HOWEVER, if this is the case, it is probably an indicator that your water conditioning is/has been insufficient. That means that its time to descale your machine and review your water conditioning system. In the case of my client with the Classe 10, she'd neglected to replace her water filter cartridge at a reasonable time (it was maybe 2 years old). Visited her again last month for the same issue (she still hadn't ordered a replacement cartridge, which is not a model that I stock), this time I ordered her a cartridge and followed up to make sure she changed it. Have your post-treatment water tested to make sure it is 2 grains hardness or below.
You can get a pretty good idea of how true your sightglass reading is by turning off the machine and draining the boiler. If the sightglass still shows water once you've drained the boiler dry you know you have a problem.
All that said, this strikes me as maybe being time to call in a tech.
Hope this helps.
Just to update we changed the fill valve and it at this point seems to have fixed the problem. We have a water filter system for the entire water supply to the store after looking at the inside of the machine we do seem to have a little bit of a build up problem so we are going to install a filter just for the espresso machine. Thanks for the suggestions all ideas where appericated and very usefull.
Kathy Fadorsen said:Just to update we changed the fill valve and it at this point seems to have fixed the problem. We have a water filter system for the entire water supply to the store after looking at the inside of the machine we do seem to have a little bit of a build up problem so we are going to install a filter just for the espresso machine. Thanks for the suggestions all ideas where appericated and very usefull.
Great. Glad to hear that this was helpful. Sounds like a great idea to add another filter just for espresso.
Out of curiosity, did you verify that your sightglass was reading correctly and/or check for scale buildup in the lower sightglass tube? Some of the behavior you were describing makes me think that the fill valve might not have been your only problem (I do hope it was though).
Thanks for posting back with the rest of the story, by the way.
Are you enjoying Barista Exchange? Is it helping you promote your business and helping you network in this great industry? Donate today to keep it free to all members. Supporters can join the "Supporters Group" with a donation. Thanks!
© 2024 Created by Matt Milletto. Powered by