Remove it carefully to avoid spilling the collected condensate and pour out the condensate (Figure 2).
Caution, do not use it as drinking water! Please note that after removing the water tank, a small amount of
condensate could still drip out of the outlet, please place a suitable cloth or similar material under the outlet.
If the water tank is dirty, clean it with clear, cold or lukewarm water, without chemical additives. These can
damage the water tank and cause leaks!
Check the tank for damage before inserting it, and make sure that the float is not missing or stuck, but is
freely movable (Figure 3).
If the float is missing, the device no longer switches on (the "WATER FULL" LED remains lit), a pinched or
blocked float can cause the water tank to overflow and cause consequential damage.
Push the water tank back into the device as straight and even as possible until the surfaces of the tank and
housing wall match again. The "WATER FULL" LED goes out and the device resumes operation (Figure 4).
figure 1
figure 2
figure 3
figure 4
Page 27 of 32
Remove it carefully to avoid spilling the collected condensate and pour out the condensate (Figure 2).
Caution, do not use it as drinking water! Please note that after removing the water tank, a small amount of
condensate could still drip out of the outlet, please place a suitable cloth or similar material under the outlet.
If the water tank is dirty, clean it with clear, cold or lukewarm water, without chemical additives. These can
damage the water tank and cause leaks!
Check the tank for damage before inserting it, and make sure that the float is not missing or stuck, but is
freely movable (Figure 3).
If the float is missing, the device no longer switches on (the "WATER FULL" LED remains lit), a pinched or
blocked float can cause the water tank to overflow and cause consequential damage.
Push the water tank back into the device as straight and even as possible until the surfaces of the tank and
housing wall match again. The "WATER FULL" LED goes out and the device resumes operation (Figure 4).
figure 1
figure 2
figure 3
figure 4
Page 27 of 32