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Hook up keurig to water line

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And from my research this morning, you will not only need to purchase the kit - but they for some reason don't throw in the little fitting and elbow you will need to hook it up nor the tubing. The plumbing is rather simple, the unit is exactly like a dishwasher from a plumbing standpoint, so if you get a dishwasher hookup kit from your local hardware store, the only challenge is how it hooks into the water supply system. Fittings will … see more on Amazon Question: Does this plumb kit also work on the Keurig K155?

Because the magnet was backward, the unit thought there was no water in the reservoir. OPTION 1: Now, unless you are really handy with 'hacking' things to make them work, you should know this will only work with the commercial versions and the 150 models.



We were skeptical about Keurig machines when we first heard about them. Although we still scoff at the added waste of throwing away a plastic container of used grounds for each cup of coffee made, we tried one at the in-laws and it does brew a great cup of Joe. One of the draws of the machine is that it does it pretty much automatically as long as you fill it with water first. His coffee maker sits right next to the fridge, which has its own water supply. So one day he thought, why not run a line to the coffee maker as well? He pulled out the refrigerator and added a T-fitting to split the water supply line. From there he ran an extension next to the coffee maker that terminates with a valve being pointed to by the arrow in the lower left. The plastic supply line leaving the valve passes through a rubber grommet in the lid of the water reservoir pointed to by the other arrow. Posted in Tagged , , , Post navigation The sensor in that Keurig relies on a magnet inside a float in the reservoir. Or use a photodiode to watch for the blinking blue LED from the back of the tank. Just using the add water LED to drive the solenoid would only add a small bit of water to the reservoir enough to make the sensor turn off. What you really want to do, is to use the add water sensor to start adding water, and stop adding water when the reservoir is almost full. With the eTape, you decide how empty or how full the reservoir gets every time. I also designed some fail safes into the system. For example, using an inline flow meter, I am able to set a hard max for how much water should actually flow. By knowing the capacity of the reservoir you are trying to fill, and using the flow meter to measure how much water has flowed, you are able to add hard outer limits to the sometimes finicky eTape readings. If any measurement is off, the logic goes into an error loop to prevent any flooding. Hope this helps, enjoy. Oh man, I know of four houses and 5 floors of an apartment that have been heavily damaged by trouble with water lines like these. Leaks, failed valves, always seemingly during vacation. The downside is it would only fill when the kitchen sink faucet was open. I admit I only skimmed the video. I did the same, but tapped into the filtered water on my refrigerator. I bought a refrigerator door water solenoid and hose and simply put a 120v switch inside an enclosure to power it. I was going to try to tap into the sensor inside, but the case proved too much work to mess with. Not sure if this will share but: I want to tap into my post-filtered water from my fridge like you did. Question concerning the solenoid…. How is this any different than installing a water filter system with a simple T connector? Or running a hose from a different faucet? Or running a water line to a refrigerator? Clearly I am missing something, or expecting an average Hackaday user to know basic plumbing. Keuirg and similar only produce passable coffee IMHO, if you really want good coffe it has to be bean to cup… and of course bean to cup, much less waste I HATE waste all your doing is throwing out coffee grounds and the bag the beans came in.. I have been thinking of doing this kind of mod to my bean-to-cup machine, I drink so much I empty the water reservoir very quickly! First of all Im sorry if my english isnt that good, Im no native speaker. Now my thoughts and concerns: Instead of placing a supply line through my whole ktichen Id rather take that tank, pour out the remaining water in the sink, clean it and fill it up manually. That takes only about half a minute, there is no danger of a little flooding in your kitchen guess what your insurance says if you tell them you had a leakage in the supply line you built yourself and the best part: you have fresh water. The way he does, a small part of the water inside his tank gets old and there are germs spreading inside the tank. As far as I know, the water tank is the most unhygienic part of those coffee machines. The internal tank is held at 187-195 degrees, depending on the model and set preferences. That is hot enough to keep the water in the tank sterile. That article was written by some whacko who is probably an anti-vaxor with no qualms about turning her walking health hazards loose in public schools. I betcha she also crusades against GMO wheat and cow hormones. Being an instrument tech, I know the bells and whistles that can turn something simple into a nightmare when they fail and I have to call Servicemaster when I get home from work. I ran mine from my under sink carbon filter, up behind the backsplash and mounted a Swagelok fitting and stainless bracket gizmos with a ball valve to the wall. Came out of the valve with one of their SS flex tubes thru the grommet into the tank. Will fit any coffee maker from now on and never fail without my presence. Tank refills in 30 secs. Not automatic, just Japanese reliable.

I betcha she also crusades against GMO wheat and cow hormones. Teflon tape is great in the right application, just not here. I compared this to the pour over resevoir, met the error, got the magnet back in hook up keurig to water line, and re-installed the retainer. That is hot enough to keep the water in the tank sterile. You can check the water level on the menu. If you are a small business owner who provides coffee to your staff or customers, or someone who has this in their office and is sick and tired of refilling it, or your co-workers never refill it, etc. Still a great idea. If any measurement is off, the logic goes into an error loop to prevent any flooding. From there he ran an extension next to the coffee maker that terminates with a valve being pointed to by the arrow in the lower left. This wasn't due to lack of home maintenance or descaling, etc. What you really want to do, is to use the add water sensor to start adding water, and stop adding water when the del is almost full. I didn't realize that I installed the magnet backwards, with the magnet facing inside instead of outside the reservoir.

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released December 10, 2018

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