Hey y'all, it's been a minute. I finally got around to doing a deep clean of my DE filter. I've been watching the pressure gauge, and doing a standard backwash as recommended based on level. This means that I haven't been doing much backwashing nor adding a whole lot of DE since the pool is inside a screened enclosure, and not much "stuff" gets into the pool.
Starting about a month or two ago, I noticed that there was some DE on the *exterior* of my filter, and it was coming from the pressure valve on the top. Ok, I told myself, I really, finally, have to crack open the filter and see what's inside. I probably need a new gasket, I thought. I purchased the "two gasket" set for the pressure valve plus a single gasket for the pipe connecting the filter grid to the PVC on the inside.
Today, I went outside this morning with my tools, and I decided to take off the top rather than start with the removal of the pressure relieve valve itself. Here is what I saw:


Yes, the filter is BURIED in DE and waste! And no, despite what it looks like, that's not a reptile sticking its head out of the top! To start, I removed DE by the handful to dig out the top. Unfortunately, it was too still heavy to lift. I looked, and essentially the filter was a giant mass of DE. It was solid DE in between all the filter elements all the way to the bottom. I had to open the bottom drain plug in the filter and go to town. After about two HOURS of running my garden hose with standard "free flow pressure" (no power washing, and not even a garden hose nozzle) on it, I was able to knock off enough DE to be able to lift the manifold and filter elements out and do the rest of the cleanout on the driveway. It turned into this when all was said and done:


I haven't reloaded it with DE yet- I'm running it without DE for now. I've noted for a long time that I have free floating "stuff" in the water which is especially visible at night with the pool light on. I'm now wondering if I have free-floating DE in the pool somehow, which I'm hoping will get caught in the filter, now that it's unclogged. Amazingly, I don't see any tears, gaps or holes in the filter, so kudos to Hayward. After running it for a few hours I'll open it up to see what new is trapped on the filter. I may end up taking the filter elements off the manifold for a closer inspection as well.
Anyway, have you seen nastier DE filter? And how often should I be popping the top to clean this bad boy? As always, thank you in advance for your advice/recommendations, and I hope you enjoyed my story!
-Jonathan
Starting about a month or two ago, I noticed that there was some DE on the *exterior* of my filter, and it was coming from the pressure valve on the top. Ok, I told myself, I really, finally, have to crack open the filter and see what's inside. I probably need a new gasket, I thought. I purchased the "two gasket" set for the pressure valve plus a single gasket for the pipe connecting the filter grid to the PVC on the inside.
Today, I went outside this morning with my tools, and I decided to take off the top rather than start with the removal of the pressure relieve valve itself. Here is what I saw:


Yes, the filter is BURIED in DE and waste! And no, despite what it looks like, that's not a reptile sticking its head out of the top! To start, I removed DE by the handful to dig out the top. Unfortunately, it was too still heavy to lift. I looked, and essentially the filter was a giant mass of DE. It was solid DE in between all the filter elements all the way to the bottom. I had to open the bottom drain plug in the filter and go to town. After about two HOURS of running my garden hose with standard "free flow pressure" (no power washing, and not even a garden hose nozzle) on it, I was able to knock off enough DE to be able to lift the manifold and filter elements out and do the rest of the cleanout on the driveway. It turned into this when all was said and done:


I haven't reloaded it with DE yet- I'm running it without DE for now. I've noted for a long time that I have free floating "stuff" in the water which is especially visible at night with the pool light on. I'm now wondering if I have free-floating DE in the pool somehow, which I'm hoping will get caught in the filter, now that it's unclogged. Amazingly, I don't see any tears, gaps or holes in the filter, so kudos to Hayward. After running it for a few hours I'll open it up to see what new is trapped on the filter. I may end up taking the filter elements off the manifold for a closer inspection as well.
Anyway, have you seen nastier DE filter? And how often should I be popping the top to clean this bad boy? As always, thank you in advance for your advice/recommendations, and I hope you enjoyed my story!
-Jonathan
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