I'd imagine the motor just picked then to die. If the tank was only 3/4 full then no damage to it should have occurred, sensor or no sensor. There should be some sort of margin of safety built in in the event of a sensor failure. My old original shop vac that was in a fire that lives out in the backyard has all kinds of stuff to shut it off if it gets too full. But because it sat outside and the fire, I had to disable all that. It most certainly will suck up water into the motor when overfull, and you can tell immediately, because it changes sound. I bought a replacement many years ago but this one still runs so I still use it. Though I haven't fired it up in years, I need to see if it still works.
Es muy poco probable que un motor de aspiracion necesite un recambio. El que tenia con un cambio de rodamientos y una buena limpieza podia seguir funcionado muchos años mas. Gracias. Para mas consejos, sigame.
I'd imagine the motor just picked then to die. If the tank was only 3/4 full then no damage to it should have occurred, sensor or no sensor. There should be some sort of margin of safety built in in the event of a sensor failure.
My old original shop vac that was in a fire that lives out in the backyard has all kinds of stuff to shut it off if it gets too full. But because it sat outside and the fire, I had to disable all that. It most certainly will suck up water into the motor when overfull, and you can tell immediately, because it changes sound. I bought a replacement many years ago but this one still runs so I still use it. Though I haven't fired it up in years, I need to see if it still works.
Es muy poco probable que un motor de aspiracion necesite un recambio. El que tenia con un cambio de rodamientos y una buena limpieza podia seguir funcionado muchos años mas. Gracias. Para mas consejos, sigame.
Does It Run Better Now After You Put The New Motor In The Floor Scrubber