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Installation
1. Remove the current fittings (if any) from the
water supply valve behind the refrigerator and install one John
Guest refrigerator connector (center in the picture) in its place.
Install the second refrigerator connector on the water inlet fitting
of the refrigerator. (You may have to remove a small portion of the
felt back cover to gain access. Refrigerator inlets are
usually, but not always, on the lower right corner of the back of
the refrigerator.)
2. Find a good location for the filter.
(Pictured below.) It can be bracket mounted on the wall behind
the refrigerator, placed in a cabinet above or beside the
refrigerator (1/4" holes can be drilled in walls to provide
access), or it can simply lie on the floor behind the refrigerator
or be placed on its side on top of the refrigerator. Remember
that you will eventually have to replace the filter cartridge (the
long part in the picture.), so put is somewhere that's accessible.
Be aware, too, that it should be protected and placed in an area
where tubing will not crimp or be damaged. The bracket is included for wall
mounting, but you don't have to use it. If wall mounting, be sure to
note the proper flow direction indicated by the "In" and "Out" on
the cap (the small part in the picture).
3. Run tubing provided from the water inlet valve to the "In"
port of the filter and from the "Out" port of the filter to the
water inlet connection of the refrigerator.
Note: Try to save a small amount of tubing to use as a startup
adapter. This will be explained below.
The John Guest connectors work by simply inserting the tubing
into the fitting until you feel it "hit bottom." The tube
should be cut squarely to assure a good connection. If you
need to remove the tubing, simply push in to the collet (the small
piece of the fitting that touches the tube) and simultaneously pull
the tube out.
Use (or don't use) the two plug-in elbows (at left in the
picture above) as needed on either the connectors or the filter.
They not only allow you to make an elbow from a straight fitting if
needed, but they swivel as the refrigerator is moved into place to
avoid twisting and crimping the tubing.
4. Insert the valve (at right in the picture above) into the
tubing just before the "In" port of the filter. Do this by
simply making a good square cut with sharp scissors and
inserting the ends of the tubing into the valve. There's no
"In" or "Out"; the valve works either way. This provides an
easy shutoff for filter changes or (perish the thought) leaks.
Note: If the unit is installed on top of or at the side of the
refrigerator, place the valve in a position that will allow you to
turn off the water and change the cartridge without pulling the
refrigerator out from the wall. Startup
Once the unit is installed, and before the refrigerator has been
pushed back to the wall, remove the tubing from the "Out" port of
the filter and insert a small length of leftover tubing. Get
bucket or pan to catch water. With the John Guest valve turned off
(the handle at right angle to the valve body), open the metal inlet
valve at the wall and check for leaks. Water should rush into
the tubing but not enter the filter.
Next, slowly open the valve and allow water to enter the filter
and pass out of the short drain tube that you have installed in the
"Out" port of the filter and into the bucket. The black material
issuing from the filter is called "fines," and it is natural dust
from the carbon in the filter that must be rinsed away. Allow
the water to run until it's clear, then run a few more quarts into
the bucket (emptying the bucket when necessary).
When the filter has been rinsed well, turn off the John Guest
valve, reattach the tube that connects to the refrigerator to the
"Out" port of the filter, turn the John Guest valve back on
and check again for leaks.
The filter is now installed an in operation. When you're
certain there are no leaks, push the refrigerator back into
position, being careful not to crimp or run over the tubing. |