- Jul 24, 2020
- 280
- Pool Size
- 19500
- Surface
- Plaster
- Chlorine
- Salt Water Generator
- SWG Type
- Jandy Aquapure 1400
Hey folks, happy Monday!
Apologies in advance that this will likely turn into a long one. I'll try to keep things short!
Summary
Having just installed solar heating on our garage roof, we're experiencing the usual challenge in that our existing 2.6 THP 2-speed pump isn't doing a good job. At low speed (and having had to move the VRV) the solar still works but likely at very reduced efficiency and with low flow overall, and at high speed it's a loud energy hog and probably pushes too much water through the system.
At the same time, we also have a sheer descent water feature that was plumbed with a single speed 2.21 THP pump with a set of valves that are choked almost all the way closed to hold back the flow, that seems to be massively overpowered the use case. We don't like running it (pH impact aside) because it's so loud and also because I know just how much power it's using up!
I'd like to explore the possibility of reconfiguring the pumps to:
1) Use the old 2-speed pump for the water feature and run it on low, with the valves opened back up to restore the flow as much as possible/needed; and
2) DIY retrofit a variable speed motor (V-Green is the obvious candidate but open to alternatives) onto the old single-speed pump and use that to run the pool. I would set up the speeds using the digital inputs vs. RS485 as laid out in this awesome post by @MSchutzer since it won't communicate directly with the Aqualink panel.
This would be a 'two birds with one stone' solution and minimize the expense involved, rather than replacing entire pumps which are otherwise perfectly functional.
List of Current Equipment
Pool pump - Jandy Stealth SHPF2.0-2 (2HP x 1.3 = 2.6 THP) [3450RPM 'high' / 1725RPM 'low']
Sheer descent pump - Jandy Stealth SHPF1.5 (1.5 x 1.47 = 2.21 THP) [3450RPM]
~20,000 gallons in-ground.
1 skimmer, 3 return jets.
Questions
1) Does this sound feasible overall?
2) Will the 2-speed on low likely provide 'good enough' flow to use the descent given the minimal distance and lift involved?
3) Given the starting point for the pool is a 2.6THP 2-speed, should I go straight to the 2.7HP V-Green motor, or could the 1.65 be sufficient? There is a large price difference ($400 vs $650) between these two options, so I don't want to just default to the larger one unless there is a good reason to do so; and at $700 that's a lot closer to just saying 'screw it' and getting an entirely new pump (maybe one that can talk to my Aqualink control panel) to avoid the fiddly labor of doing the motor swap.
A little more context here. While I see the general recommendation is to replace 'like with like' and match as close to the original THP as possible, I see plenty of folks around here with similar sized pools perfectly happily using lower rated pumps. If the PB oversized all the equipment on my pad, it feels silly to continue that trend when doing something like this unless it really needed it in the first place.
4) Am I right in saying that the practical difference between the two is that it the 1.65HP would need to run at higher RPM to achieve the same flow rate? How does the electricity usage compare between the two? At full speed the 2.7 would obviously use more overall but would the 2.7 running slower use more or less electricity than the 1.65 at the same flow? Presumably noise levels will also work similarly?
5) Would I need to plan making any changes to the impellers as well? I remember reading that water features do better with larger / oversized impellers? I could potentially also swap those over if needed, or just get a new one to go with the new motor vs. having to open them both up?
Thanks everybody!
Ben
Apologies in advance that this will likely turn into a long one. I'll try to keep things short!
Summary
Having just installed solar heating on our garage roof, we're experiencing the usual challenge in that our existing 2.6 THP 2-speed pump isn't doing a good job. At low speed (and having had to move the VRV) the solar still works but likely at very reduced efficiency and with low flow overall, and at high speed it's a loud energy hog and probably pushes too much water through the system.
At the same time, we also have a sheer descent water feature that was plumbed with a single speed 2.21 THP pump with a set of valves that are choked almost all the way closed to hold back the flow, that seems to be massively overpowered the use case. We don't like running it (pH impact aside) because it's so loud and also because I know just how much power it's using up!
I'd like to explore the possibility of reconfiguring the pumps to:
1) Use the old 2-speed pump for the water feature and run it on low, with the valves opened back up to restore the flow as much as possible/needed; and
2) DIY retrofit a variable speed motor (V-Green is the obvious candidate but open to alternatives) onto the old single-speed pump and use that to run the pool. I would set up the speeds using the digital inputs vs. RS485 as laid out in this awesome post by @MSchutzer since it won't communicate directly with the Aqualink panel.
This would be a 'two birds with one stone' solution and minimize the expense involved, rather than replacing entire pumps which are otherwise perfectly functional.
List of Current Equipment
Pool pump - Jandy Stealth SHPF2.0-2 (2HP x 1.3 = 2.6 THP) [3450RPM 'high' / 1725RPM 'low']
Sheer descent pump - Jandy Stealth SHPF1.5 (1.5 x 1.47 = 2.21 THP) [3450RPM]
~20,000 gallons in-ground.
1 skimmer, 3 return jets.
Questions
1) Does this sound feasible overall?
2) Will the 2-speed on low likely provide 'good enough' flow to use the descent given the minimal distance and lift involved?
3) Given the starting point for the pool is a 2.6THP 2-speed, should I go straight to the 2.7HP V-Green motor, or could the 1.65 be sufficient? There is a large price difference ($400 vs $650) between these two options, so I don't want to just default to the larger one unless there is a good reason to do so; and at $700 that's a lot closer to just saying 'screw it' and getting an entirely new pump (maybe one that can talk to my Aqualink control panel) to avoid the fiddly labor of doing the motor swap.
A little more context here. While I see the general recommendation is to replace 'like with like' and match as close to the original THP as possible, I see plenty of folks around here with similar sized pools perfectly happily using lower rated pumps. If the PB oversized all the equipment on my pad, it feels silly to continue that trend when doing something like this unless it really needed it in the first place.
4) Am I right in saying that the practical difference between the two is that it the 1.65HP would need to run at higher RPM to achieve the same flow rate? How does the electricity usage compare between the two? At full speed the 2.7 would obviously use more overall but would the 2.7 running slower use more or less electricity than the 1.65 at the same flow? Presumably noise levels will also work similarly?
5) Would I need to plan making any changes to the impellers as well? I remember reading that water features do better with larger / oversized impellers? I could potentially also swap those over if needed, or just get a new one to go with the new motor vs. having to open them both up?
Thanks everybody!
Ben
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