- Aug 31, 2021
- 264
- Pool Size
- 25000
- Surface
- Plaster
- Chlorine
- Salt Water Generator
- SWG Type
- Pureline Crystal Pure 60,000
My wife I became owners of a new-to-us 1996 pool earlier this year (our first). I'm slowly getting the hang of maintaining the pool chemistry (took the reins from the pool service co about a month ago) and have successfully completed some minor mechanical service/repairs (replacing booster pump seals, changing light bulb, repairing Polaris cleaner, etc).
The pool equipment includes a total of three pumps:
For now, everything is working fine except for the noisy water feature pump. I am interested in reducing our energy use associated with running the pool, and am trying to come up with the most sensible upgrade path so I'm not scrambling once one of the pumps decides to go out.
My questions:
The pool equipment includes a total of three pumps:
- 1.5 hp single-speed main pump - works great, very quiet, previous owner claimed to have "rebuilt" the pump within the last few years but didn't provide any details
- 1.5 hp single-speed water feature pump (used to operate four waterfalls) - old, works fine but is very loud, possibly motor/bearing noise?
- Polaris PB4-60 booster pump for pool cleaner - old, works fine, I recently replaced the seals to cure a water leak
For now, everything is working fine except for the noisy water feature pump. I am interested in reducing our energy use associated with running the pool, and am trying to come up with the most sensible upgrade path so I'm not scrambling once one of the pumps decides to go out.
My questions:
- Can the iAqualink system control only Jandy variable-speed pumps, or would other brands be an option?
- Is it possible to get one large variable speed pump that could replace two or all three of my existing pumps? The idea of simplifying the whole setup is appealing, if this would make sense.
- If replacing the existing pumps with one large pump makes sense - is it possible to run these large pumps on 120v? The Jandy pump info I've scanned suggests that this is possible, but I haven't read through the details. I'd be interested in being able to at least run the basic circulation functions during an extended power outage, but I only have a 120V generator (I can always upgrade the generator, of course, but would rather not do so if I could get away with it).