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THE biggest dog - Rocket Giotto V2

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  • #16
    A nice, mature response don_nairn and, I think, good advice. I also think more responses like this would make CS a nicer place - the real nasties would get bored and go away. Putting vinegar on a wound tends to make the screaming louder.

    Pete

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    • #17
      Originally posted by don_nairn View Post
      It may be all sorts of things it may even be that your filter slows the supply of water to the machine causing the low water light/circuit to operate exactly as it should.

      as an experiment can you bypass the filter and see if it behaves differently?

      While I can understand your frustration on spending a lot of money and the machine not working properly.

      The best way to try and get the problem fixed would be to have some sort of discussion with the supplier.

      Try and stay calm and focus on the problem.

      Venting your anger at the supplier may not get the best possible solution for you.

      Best of luck.
      Thanks, will do. I will aim to run the machine on tap water for a while to see if I can isolate the problem a bit further. While the water could be one issue, there was also some water under the machine which could a seal or another break somewhere.

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      • #18
        Michalsz, I understand your frustration. One answer only. First thing Monday call your vendor. No point wasting energy fretting over the problem. As well, you run the risk of voiding the warranty if you play technician.

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        • #19
          I second the notion that your RO water is the source of the Low Water problem. And... for what its worth... RO water yields a very dead and flat cup of coffee so you may want to rethink the type of water you pour into your machine.

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          • #20
            Research your machine thoroughly, plenty of info online and on this forum including the effects of RO water on the sensors. Just out of curiosity what grinder have u paired up with the giotto?

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            • #21
              Originally posted by saoye View Post
              Research your machine thoroughly, plenty of info online and on this forum including the effects of RO water on the sensors. Just out of curiosity what grinder have u paired up with the giotto?
              I have the Vario ceramic burr grinder. It has plenty of options and grinds very very fine if you want it. Or anything in between which the Giotto seems to like.

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              • #22
                Mate, warranties exist for many reasons. Preventing a thread like this is one of them, although probably not one the company will actively base their warranties on. However that would be amusing in a conference for instance.

                "How best should we cater for the consumer's warranty terms and conditions with this new product sir?"
                "Hmmmmm.........we should clearly state in the brochure that if the end user confronts a problem with their machine they are not in any circumstance to take to the local forums in a bid to defame and antagonise our respected company name and what we represent! THIS NEEDS TO BE A PRIORITY!"
                "Well done sir"

                lolol jk but that might happen one day.

                On topic though, instead of raging on the manufacturer straight away you should accept that 100% of the product sold wont be perfect and unfortunately you picked one that isn't. I work in electronics repairs and we see pretty much brand new TV's that have failed within 1-2 months of ownership. The customer is reasonably unsatisfied with this and that is normal, i'd be upset too. But, it's a fact of life that life itself isn't perfect, or fair, and we need to accept that.

                Also, i see you wrote that you tried to diagnose and fix the problem yourself? I hope you didn't disassemble any non-user serviceable parts to do this. Some repairers hate it when the customer has had a go because they don't know what's gone on and if there is possible safety concerns. Plus it'd be stated in your warranty booklet or instruction manuals not to.
                I had a guy bring in a 6 month old Panasonic convection microwave oven and he'd had a bit of a go at it. He managed to squeeze the 240V wiring running to the convection motor and element between 2 fairly sharp metal edges. The only thing that saved it was the fibre sheathing over the wiring. If it hadn't been there to protect it he could easily have shorted 240V to the metal case and hurt or killed someone.
                Not saying that's something serious that you could have done, but rather what a repairer may be afraid of.

                Good to see you have accepted your over-reaction. Things tend to run a lot smoother when you're not angry at it.

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                • #23
                  Steam needs to be released and a forum is a pretty harmless place for it I reckon. Better than kicking the cat.

                  As filtered water is recommended in the manual and RO is a common method of filtering drinking water, avoiding unremineralised RO water is exactly the thing I expect the manual and the dealer to point out. I know what it's like, you spend hours trying to ensure you're not doing something stupid to save the effort of returning the thing and the bill if it was your stupidity.

                  However as RO water is well known to cause low water level problems, wouldn't the control box prevent heating up in the first place, knowing that the boiler level sensors might also be being fooled? Or is the RO water is leaching so much copper out of your pipes and boiler everything's all confused
                  Last edited by simonko; 15 April 2013, 02:01 AM.

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