I fully agree that Murphy is a jerkwad.I was afraid that it would totally separate one day when I wasn’t around and cause major chaos to my equipment! It was painful to shell out $1400 but you can’t put a price on safety.
I am firmly on team 'more flow makes more mixing'.I have been running high speed on the pump trying to turn over the water as fast as possible
Dave,Scrolling through the menus to toggle a circuit is more complicated than I'm interested in
Salt, CH and CYA need 24 hours to mix at opening the same way they do during the season.Just surprised about their salt reading at 1000.
Dave,
"Pool High" is just a Circuit Name.. It could be "Jim"... It is just a name, that by itself, does nothing..
What does it do on a schedule?? I suspect it just changes the pump speed.
I don't see how you could assign it to the heater button...
If it just changes the pump speed, then most likely it is a Feature Circuit.. If that is the case, it can be turned on or off by using the little 3" LCD
Menu, scroll to find Feature Circuit with a name of "Pool High" and turn it on or off..
Edit... What is it you are actually trying to do??
Thanks,
Jim R.
I have owned cars like that.An analogy that I can use is a vehicle starting up, you driving a mile down the road, the vehicle deciding that the mpg/efficiency of the engine is not optimal, and then shutting down. I guess another vehicle analogy is that an emission sensor returns a code and the vehicle's computer just decides to shut down.
Yeah, you continue to harp on that.Seems the cell was not insane all along.
Totally also because the only thing they put is LC…..Yeah, turn it off, and let FC come back down into range for your CYA. Link-->FC/CYA Levels
Then turn it back on.
In the future, tell them you want a "no chemical" opening at a reduced cost.
You can handle startup.
Thanks for the additional information. If this waterfall fixture is designed to be installed upside down, as it was in this case, then the design would have considered water that is retained after winterization, and that shouldn't have been the cause of the damage. So still curious about that.Spoke with a friend who is a builder. While the diagrams usually show the installation in a horizontal orientation, the fixture can be installed in any way that will provide the desired effect. That may be what the builder of your pool did.
Its not pressure, but flow, that determines the way those falls look, usually requiring 20 - 30 GPM/foot of length.
Dead link for me...