Thanks Charles, that is the #1 rated suggestion so far. Yes, my donuts ride on the conveyor belt.
My Sanitation Chemical Supplier has suggested a chemical that has Sodium Peroxide in it. They spray veggies with it and do not have a rinse step so I should be able to add to water. Have to make sure the seals and bearings can handle it though. :-)
It has also been suggested that the water is not a problem in the first place, I will need to run some samples to the lab at the end of the day and see whats in the water that could be a problem.
Any suggestions what to test for? Basically its glaze (sugar) and fried yeast donut particulates that are getting in the water throughout the day.
Tks
Phil
Dear imadoughguy,
Not very familiar with doughnut technology but i guess the “usual suspects” from a product quality POV are the hygienic micros as listed in yr typical specification (eg coliforms et al). A significant APC count is presumably an immediate sign for worry + presumably the liquid appearance. i daresay from yr initial comments that you have accumulated micro. data and observational assessments already.
The nozzle system I mentioned is used for freezing battered/breaded items and I agree that the belts can get in a mess, but maybe, solid, horizontal designs, far less though. Swings and roundabouts. 
I seem to recall spiral units typically hv "in-line" washing stages but yours sounds a truly complicated set-up to maintain. IMEX, first target for complaints / advice is usually the machine disributor. They have usually played with everything. 
As you probably guessed, my own initial reservation is towards adding QAC to the belt / product. i have no doubt that commercial products are invariably validated/approved for their designated usage but attachments like those below would worry me for a no-rinse scenario. Perhaps (slightly) less-so if there was a rinse tank as well.
Quaternary Ammonium Compounds (QACs) on foodstuffs.pdf 371.62KB
12 downloads
Quaternary ammonium compounds, AESAN.pdf 80.47KB
10 downloads
Rgds / Charles.C
PS - i have worked with hydrogen peroxide solutions. Workers were not too happy from memory, skin handling factors, although it is a common (but weaker) product from the pharmacist shop. Also typically not so cheap but I guess quats are not cheap either. You cannot use hypochlorites due tainting or the problem is the lack of detergent action ?
I am guessing solid peroxides will be quite combustible based on my experiences with storage of high-test hypochlorites. 
PPS - it sometimes seems to me that veggies are sprayed with almost everything.
Edited by Charles.C, 20 October 2013 - 05:53 AM.
revised / expanded