The pump cycle on the empty cycle is not operating properly. It is controlled by a circuit board in the panel on the front of your machine. You will need a properly trained person to fix it. Contact Jenn Air on the web and they will tell you who in your area is trained to fix the Jenn Air Dishwasher. I have a General Electric that is twelve years old and si still operating perfectly.
First you check the drain hose and the drain that it is hooked up too for obstructions.
Depending on the machine,there is a check valve, gate valve, drain pump, check them for obstructions too. If you where to remove the hose where it connects to the valve or pump and then the part that it is connected to you will know if something is blocking it.
If this is not the case you will need a pro to check the valve,pump,motor timer control.
Check the drain line coming from the dishwasher. Make sure that it loops up as high as it can under the cabinet. You want it to be above your p-trap. Could be it is draining back into your unit.
Can be a few reasons. -Food particles jamming the filter screen on top of pump at bottom of D/W floor, discharge pipe kinked, or something small caught in impeller. The first 2 are more common, check them and see. The impeller can sometimes be got at if you lift or unscrew the filter screen from inside bottom .
Can be a number of reasons. -Food particles jamming the filter screen on top of pump at bottom of D/W floor, discharge pipe kinked, or something small caught in impeller, or worst, the pump is broken. The first 2 are more common, check them and see. The impeller can sometimes be got at if you lift or unscrew the filter screen from inside bottom .
The pump being dead is not the end of the dishwasher, many pumps can be bought for $60- 80 and replaced in about an hour by someone with average mechanical skills.
Most likely the filters are blocked. If not, it's possible the pump is broken.
The drain is blocked. Either that or theres a problem with the wash program. locate the drain and try unblocking first. Sink and drain unblocker may be a good starting point.
The pump intake is possibly plugged with debris.
Filter is possibly plugged, or pump is broken.
my dishwasher drain pump does not work
Probably not, depends on where the clog is at and how the dishwasher drain is connected. I wouldn't chance it, but the worst that will happen is the sink will fill with the water from the dishwasher.
Some common problems include: Why does my dishwasher not drain? Why does my dishwasher leak, and why does my dishwasher not dry.
The disposal has to be in place so that the drain on the dishwasher is connected. If you do not have a disposal or are removing it, there is a extension tube for the drain that has the dishwasher tube in it. The disposal does not have to work for the dishwasher to drain. The water is run through the disposal so that any food particles get ground before going in the drain. After a while, the disposal will begin to smell if it is not run.
In centre of the base.
Most common is a center drain, but it can be at either side depending on where the drain goes into the wall. On the side closest to the dishwasher, the tail piece directly under the sink has a smaller tube in the side of it for the dishwasher drain.
If you don't have a disposal, you can get a Tail piece, the section of drain right below the bottom of the sink that has a Y on it that is the size of the drain from the dishwasher.
If the dishwasher is hooked into a garburetor, there is a plug in the garburetor where the hose drain attaches that needs to be knocked out. The drain hose might be plugged where it joins to the plumbing drainage. The other problem, plumbing-wise, is the drain hose has to be fed as high as it can go under the sink and back down into the drain.
No. Many vital parts in the dishwasher are plastic. Usually, the drain hose is plastic, too. Drain cleaners are ok for PVC pipes, but too caustic for other types of plastic. Drain cleaners also cause corrosion of metal parts.
To hook a drain line, not a water line, from the dishwasher to the garbage disposer is as follows: there is a connection on the garbage disposer for a dishwasher (on the side) There is a plastic fitting that came with the disposer(if all parts were saved) The fitting is going to look like it has barbed ridges(fortubing toslide over)on one end and a flange and seal at the other end. 1) make sure the plastic is knocked out of the disposer where the fitting connects to. 2) Connect fitting to disposer using 2 screws 3) Connect drain hose from dishwasher to disposer by sliding rubber gromet over plastic barbed fitting. Make sure you cut the rubber gromet to the right size of the fitting 4) Use hose clamp over rubber gromet. 5) Use zip ties to hang drain tubing as high as you can so water wont drain back into dishwasher. (new dishwashers ususally have p-trap built into the drain line already.) thats it. should work
Probably the drain hose from the dishwasher isn't high enough to keep the water from running back . The hose should be above the level of the disposal at some point. Some states require an "air gap" which is a device that is placed in the drain line to prevent this. Some states require a simple high loop in the drain hose. Many dishwasher manufacturers are now installing backflow preventers in the dishwasher.
Garbage disposal, if one is installed, or a wye branch fitting on the tail piece of sink drain. Dishwasher drain line should have an air break or air gap before the disposal or wye branch fitting.