The Jobsite Problem: Backflow & Slow Cleanup
If you do crack injection, leak stopping, or concrete repair, you already know the pain: the injection is only half the battle. What costs time and mess is what happens right after you stop pumping.
Common issues crews run into:
- Reverse backflow during pressure drop or disconnect
- Material blowback that creates a messy work area
- Slower handling/removal that breaks your crew rhythm
- Extra cleanup that kills daily production
When you’re running multiple ports in a day, a few extra minutes per port becomes a real cost.
What’s New in ACST S-10
The ACST Instant Injection Packer S-10 is built for jobsite efficiency. The key structural update is simple, but it changes the finish of the workflow:
S-10 places the anti-backflow steel ball (check ball) at the rear—specifically at the rubber tail end.
In practical terms, that means the check action is located closer to the main sealing zone, which helps create a cleaner, more controllable post-injection state.
Why Rear Check-Ball Placement Matters (Simple Logic)
Moving the check ball to the rubber tail end is not a cosmetic change—it’s aimed at real jobsite behavior:
1) Shorter backflow path → faster check seating
2) More stable post-injection condition
3) Faster post-injection handling (break-off workflow)
Note: “Immediate break-off” still means you follow your resin SOP and safety procedures. Always work within your material’s handling window and jobsite requirements.
Where S-10 Fits Best
S-10 is a strong match for:
- Crack injection jobs that demand speed and consistency
- Water intrusion / leak stopping where backflow control is critical
- High-production, multi-port workflows where rhythm matters: install → inject → finish → move
If you work in basement waterproofing, foundation repair, or general concrete repair, improving end-of-injection cleanup + pace often produces the fastest ROI.
What to Show in Your Demo (If You’re Posting a Video)
If you’re using jobsite close-ups, this sequence converts well:
1) Close-up of the S-10 tail end: highlight rear check-ball placement
2) Install shot: seating and sealing at the rubber tail end
3) Injection shot: pressure build-up and steady flow
4) End-of-injection shot: demonstrate the cleaner handling / break-off rhythm
5) After shot: show the work area remains cleaner (less blowback)
Quick FAQ
Q: Does the rear check ball reduce flow?
A: A check valve is designed to close decisively when needed—not to restrict flow during injection. Flow depends on passage geometry, resin viscosity, and pump matching.
Q: Is it compatible with my setup?
A: Send us your pump interface, hose/fitting spec, and resin type (PU/EP, etc.). We’ll recommend a ready-to-run configuration.
Q: What’s the biggest benefit in real life?
A: Less backflow mess + faster post-injection handling = better daily production pace.
If your crew wants cleaner finishing, reduced backflow, faster post-injection handling, and a stable multi-port workflow—ask for ACST S-10.
Comment or message us with your application (crack / leak / foundation), resin type, and pump interface—and we’ll send specs + a recommended configuration.
0 comments