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Fountain Set-up
Procedure
D0151 Floral Shield
D0151b Floral Shield with Base

A. Materials Needed
- Supplied with fountain: (D151) 4 concrete pieces, (D151b) 5
concrete pieces; clear plastic hose, black rubber plug (only for fountains
where pump cord goes through the middle of the bowl); pump and Kryton
"Krystol Hydrostop" (if you purchased these with the fountain)
- To be purchased: plumber's putty (building supply, hardware
store), household Vaseline (drugstore, pharmacy), pump and Kryton
sealer (if not purchased with fountain), shims (e.g., pennies, washers,
anything that can be used to progressively raise a fountain part by
small increments) and heavy felt "feet" (often used on chair
legs to protect floors; purchased at your building supply or hardware
store)
B. Procedure
- Test the pump to make sure it is operational. A kitchen sink filled
with six inches of water is sufficient. Only plug the pump into the
electrical socket after the pump is submerged. Running a pump dry will
destroy it. Also, examine any control on the pump so that once the pump
is installed, you will know how to increase/decrease the flow of water.
Removing an installed faulty pump is time-consuming.
- Touch up any scratches on the fountain pieces with touch up stain.
Let dry.
- After ensuring that every piece of the fountain is absolutely dry
(not in contact with rain/wet ground for several days,) water seal every
piece with Kryton sealer. Be sure to cover ALL sides of every part,
working methodically to ensure complete coverage.
- Prepare the area on which the fountain will stand. A concrete pad,
gravel base or hard-packed soil is fine. Ensure that the area is packed
down and reasonably level.
- Place the base of the fountain (D151b only) in the desired location
and level it by shimming the bottom. If the fountain is on a solid surface,
make sure the cord slot in the bottom of the base is pointed in the
direction you desire (usually toward the back and the electrical supply.)
- Adhere the heavy felt "feet" (one side is sticky tape) to
the bottom of the fountain bowl. The concrete fountain bowl will scratch
the surface of any base, including a concrete one.
- Place the large bowl onto the base (D151b) or onto whatever surface
you desire.
- Install the pump. D151 takes only one person; D151b takes three people
if the cord is to run down the centre of the base. Have two people tip
the large bowl and base together so that a third person can feed the
pump cord down through the bowl and base to the ground. Then, reaching
under the tipped base grasp the cord and pull it out from under the
base, ensuring that the cord lies in the channel in the bottom of the
base (otherwise, the fountain cannot be properly leveled.) When pulling
the cord through, leave about four inches between the pump and the inside
of the large bowl.
- Make sure the walls of the white plastic pipe in the centre of the
fountain (through which the pump cord passes) are clean. The black rubber
plug needs to seat well into this pipe to prevent leakage.
- With some household Vaseline lightly coat all surfaces of the black
rubber plug. Open the slit in the side of the plug and place the pump
cord into the centre of the plug. Place the plug into the hole in the
fountain bowl, thus making a watertight seal around the pump cord. Make
sure the top of the plug is level with the top of the white plastic
pipe and that the slit in the plug is completely closed. Add Vaseline
to the top of the plug.
- Level the base on which the fountain will stand.
- Place the 3-hole pump housing into the large bowl and over the pump.
- Place the small bowl onto the pump house pedestal.
- Take the ½ inch plastic hose and feed it through the small
bowl down to the pump. The hose should slide easily onto the nipple
on the top of the pump.
- Using "plumber's putty" seal the small area where the plastic
hose does not completely fill the space through which it passes in the
small bowl. When the bowl fills with water, it needs to overflow at
the edges, not trickle down the centre.
- Now level the small bowl; Use pennies, metal washers, etc., to shim
as needed. Sometimes, merely rotating a bowl slightly will level it.
- Make sure the plastic hose is still attached at the bottom to the
pump. Then cut off the top of the plastic hose, leaving about 4 inches
sticking up through the small bowl.
- Make a roll of putty about 3/8-inch thick and about 6 inches long.
Connect the ends to make a circle. Lightly press this ring of putty
onto the bottom of the fountain finial (top piece.) Slide the finial
down over the 4 inches of plastic hose causing the ring of putty to
seal the finial into the small bowl.
- The "scuppers" are the indented areas in the edges of bowls
over which the water flows. Put an extra coat of water sealer on the
top and bottom edges of each scupper. This will help ensure water falls
from each scupper into the lower bowl, rather than running over the
scupper and back under the bowl (never falling at all.)
- Fill the fountain with room temperature water. Cold water poured into
a warm fountain can cause the bowls to crack. The reverse is also true.
- Plug the pump into your source of electricity. Always use properly
grounded circuits and extension cords.
- Adjust leveling of fountain bowls to gain uniform water distribution
from scuppers, and adjust pump for desired water flow.
- Reminder: Fountain bowls and pumps CANNOT BE ALLOWED
TO FREEZE WITH WATER IN THEM. If used in an unheated environment (outdoors
or unheated house), disassemble and store in winter. See manufacturer's
bulletin on "Care
and Maintenance" for more information.
C. Adjustments Commonly Needed
- Water does not flow evenly from scuppers around a bowl.
a. Check each individual scupper to make sure no excess concrete is
impeding water flow. Excess can be removed easily with a file or screwdriver.
b. Adjust shims to even out the water flow.
c. Increase water flow.
- Water does not flow out the top at all.
a. Make sure the plastic hose is not kinked at some point and that water
can flow freely from pump to finial.
b. Adjust the flow control on the pump for higher volume.
c. Check to see if pump is correct size. Pumps are rated by the height
they will raise a column of water. Less than 24" need P-60 to P-80;
24" to 48" need P-140 to P-210; over 48" needs P-280
to P-380 or higher. Contact your pump supplier for accurate sizes. Remember
that it is not the height of the fountain, but the height from the pump
to the point where the water exits that must be measured.
d. The ID (inside diameter) of the plastic hose also affects the height
the water will rise. Any pump will push water higher in a 3/8"
hose than in a ½" hose, but more volume flows from a ½"
hose.
- Water flow is too heavy or fountain splashes too much.
a. Decrease the flow control on the pump.
b. Restrict the flow through the plastic hose. Many makeshift items
will work, e.g., a nail bent into a "U" shape with the hose
pressed inside it, a small hose clamp tightened around the hose, etc.
- Large bowl leaks at plug.
a. Make sure black rubber plug is pushed firmly into white plastic pipe
in the large bowl, so that the top of the plug is level with the top
of the pipe.
b. If necessary, remove the water from the large fountain bowl (a wet/dry
vacuum makes short work of this task), remove the black rubber plug
and check with your finger to ensure the walls of the white plastic
pipe are clean and free of cement. Clean the pipe (your fingernail is
often tool enough), re-Vaseline the plug with cord and insert the plug
into the pipe. When the plug is seated properly (top of plug even with
top of white pipe and slit in plug completely closed,) apply extra Vaseline
to the top of the plug and the surrounding ¼" of white plastic
and concrete. Ensure the pump cord is snuggly fitted and that the slit
in the plug is tightly closed once seated in the pipe.
- Top bowl(s) fills but never spills over into the lower bowl.
a. Check to see if the water is actually running over the edges of
the top bowl, but then running under the lip of the bowl. If so,
several things can help.
(1) Increase the flow of the pump.
(2) Let the bowl dry completely and then apply Kryton Water Sealer
to the scuppers (indentations in the top of each bowl over which the
water flows.) The sealer encourages water not to "stick" to
the concrete and not to then run under the bowl instead of falling properly
into the bowl below.
(3) When dry, apply a small line of clear silicone (common bathroom
type from your building supply) about 3/16" thick under each scupper
right at the point where the water should fall. This small bead of silicone
will force the water to fall over it and will be invisible when the
fountain is running.
b. If water is NOT running over the edge of the bowl at all,
it is leaking through the centre around the plastic hose. Turn the fountain
off and re-seal the hole in the centre of the bowl (between the plastic
hose and the concrete) with more putty. It would not be wise to create
a permanent seal (glue, silicone, concrete) as the fountain could not
be disassembled for maintenance or moving.
- The plastic hose that came with the fountain does not fit onto
the pump purchased elsewhere.
a. Plastic hose is manufactured in sizes that allow one size to fit
snuggly inside the next larger size.
b. Measure the nipple on the top of your pump. That measurement is the
ID (inside diameter) of the plastic hose you need.
c. Usually ½" hose is supplied with the fountain. If the
pump needed 5/8", all you need is a short length (4") of 5/8"
hose from your building supply store. Insert that onto your pump, then
place the ½" hose down inside the top of the 5/8" hose
to complete the assembly. This process can also work in reverse with
3/8" hose.

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