Liquid-system repair

Wet-Cleaner Pump or Liquid-System Repair

Pump and liquid-system repair addresses the clean-water delivery path: tank outlet, cap, valve, tubing, pump, spray channel, and model-specific wet-head connections. Roller, battery, charger, and navigation repairs remain separate.

Repair commonality

Moderately common

Liquid-system repairs are moderately common because residue, scale, damaged valves, air leaks, and worn pumps interrupt controlled water delivery.

Why this commonality: A no-liquid or leaking complaint must be isolated through the exact tank, valve, tubing, pump, and head architecture before a replacement part is chosen.

Customers often describe this as

  • floor washer pump repair
  • floor cleaner not dispensing water
  • wet vacuum valve replacement
  • floor washer spray path clogged
  • floor cleaner liquid system leaking

How we identify it

How we know this may be the repair

These clues help separate this repair from similar symptoms before final inspection and pricing.

  • We trace the exact clean-water path without treating every leak as a pump failure.
  • We separate tank seating, valve, tubing, seal, pump, sensor, and control behavior.
  • We follow the model's permitted cleaning and priming procedure before replacing a component.

Signs

Signs you may notice

These are common customer-facing symptoms. A vacuum can show more than one sign at the same time.

  • A confirmed pump does not move liquid despite a correctly filled and seated tank
  • A tank valve, outlet, tube, or wet-head connection is visibly damaged
  • Liquid delivery stops or leaks at one identified component
  • The machine reports a repeatable pump or flow error

Common causes

What can cause this problem?

These are common starting points. Final repair pricing and parts availability are confirmed after inspection.

  • Blocked or scaled tank outlet, valve, tube, or spray channel
  • Cracked tank connection, failed valve, displaced seal, or air leak
  • Worn or stalled pump assembly
  • Liquid damage or control failure preventing pump operation

Inspection

What we check during service

A component-level liquid-system repair can preserve an otherwise serviceable wet-cleaning machine or attachment when the failed part is available.

  • Tank, cap, outlet valve, seals, and exact seating
  • Accessible tubing, channels, wet-head connections, and debris paths
  • Pump behavior, error messages, and model-specific service boundaries
  • Leak-free controlled test after the confirmed repair

Repair questions

Helpful things to know

Does no spray always mean the pump failed?

No. Tank seating, valves, air locks, residue, tubing, and control errors can stop liquid before the pump is condemned.

Can a leaking wet cleaner still be tested?

Do not operate it when liquid can reach the battery, motor, dock, charger, or control housing.

Repair intake

Ready to check this vacuum?

Start with photos and a short symptom description, or call if you would rather talk through the issue first.