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Low Water Pressure

Bio Bidet Bidet

Severity: Minor

What Does This Error Mean?

Low water pressure on Bio Bidet means the spray flow dropped below normal.
Inlet mesh filter is the usual cause — sediment from city water builds up over months.
Shut off the water, disconnect the inlet hose, pull and rinse the filter.
Open the wall valve fully and check that no kinks exist in the supply hose.

Affected Models

  • Bio Bidet BB-2000
  • Bio Bidet BB-1000
  • Bio Bidet Slim One
  • Bio Bidet Slim Two
  • Bio Bidet USPA 6800

Common Causes

  • Inlet filter clogged with sediment
  • Wall shut-off valve only partially open
  • Kinked supply hose behind the toilet
  • Low building water pressure
  • Wand orifice scaled with hard-water mineral

How to Fix It

  1. Shut off the water at the bidet T-valve.

    The T-valve sits between the wall valve and the toilet tank.
    Turn its handle 90 degrees to close.
    Flush the toilet to relieve pressure.

  2. Disconnect the inlet hose at the bidet.

    Place a towel underneath — small amount of water will leak.
    Unscrew the hose from the bidet's water inlet.

  3. Pull out and rinse the filter.

    A small white plastic mesh filter sits inside the inlet fitting.
    Use needle-nose pliers if it's stuck.
    Rinse under tap water until clean.
    Reinsert the same way it came out.

  4. Reconnect and reopen water.

    Reattach the hose, hand-tight then a quarter turn with pliers.
    Open the T-valve fully.
    Check for drips at the connection.

  5. Test the wand.

    Run the wash cycle.
    Spray should be back to normal pressure within seconds.
    If still weak, the wand orifice itself may be scaled — soak it in vinegar for 20 minutes.

Frequently Asked Questions

How often should I clean the inlet filter?

Every 6-12 months for typical city water.
Every 3-6 months on well water or in known hard-water areas.
It's a 5-minute task and it prevents most low-pressure complaints.