Advanced Troubleshooting & Diagnostics
Diagnosing check valve failures, relief valve issues, shutoff valve leakage, high differentials, and thermal expansion effects.
- Diagnose common check valve failure modes from test gauge readings
- Troubleshoot relief valve spitting and continuous discharge
- Identify shutoff valve leakage and its effect on test accuracy
- Explain thermal expansion effects on backflow assemblies
- Determine root causes of abnormal gauge readings in the field
Lección 1
Diagnosing Check Valve Failures
Reading the Gauge for Diagnosis
When a check valve fails its differential pressure test, the gauge reading provides clues about the nature of the failure. Understanding these patterns helps you diagnose problems efficiently.
Zero Reading (0.0 psi)
Meaning: Check valve is completely open or missing
Causes: Disc torn away, spring broken, major debris holding valve open
Action: Replace check valve module
Low Reading (0.1 - 0.9 psi)
Meaning: Check valve is partially sealing
Causes: Worn disc, small debris on seat, weak spring
Action: Clean seat first, replace disc if cleaning fails
Declining Reading
Meaning: Check valve initially holds but slowly leaks
Causes: Small nick in disc, minor seat damage, fine debris
Action: Replace disc, inspect and clean seat surface
Debris vs Wear
The two most common causes of check valve failure are debris contamination and component wear:
- Debris (sand, pipe scale, small rocks, corrosion particles) lodges between the disc and seat, preventing a complete seal. Cleaning the check valve often restores it to passing condition.
- Wear (rubber disc deterioration, seat corrosion, spring fatigue) is a permanent condition that requires component replacement. Worn discs develop grooves, cracks, or become permanently deformed.
A useful diagnostic step: if cleaning the check valve (flushing debris from the seat) improves the reading significantly, the problem was debris. If cleaning has no effect, the problem is wear.
Flushing a Check Valve
Opening the downstream test cock briefly while the assembly is pressurized can flush debris off the check valve seat. If the differential reading improves after flushing, debris was the issue. If not, the check valve module needs replacement.
Field diagnosis workflow:
A 0.0 psi reading means the check valve is completely failed. A low but non-zero reading suggests partial seal failure from debris or wear. A declining reading indicates a slow leak. Always try flushing debris before replacing components. The workflow is: read, flush, retest, then replace if needed.