- May 29, 2020
- 79
- Pool Size
- 1946
- Surface
- Fiberglass
- Chlorine
- Salt Water Generator
- SWG Type
- Astral VX 7T
You can pull the 5/16" screws that hold the cover on (3) and access the small motor and internals, but it may be the motor or the gears that are bad and Jandy doesn't list them as replacement parts.Noticed this morning a clicking noise coming from my heater. Heater isn’t on, filter pump running its normal schedule around 1200rpm. I’m not all that knowledgeable with this stuff, but the little research I’ve done makes me think that the Versaflo is trying to engage, and not working. The noise in the same as I’m used to hearing when the pump turns on initially and runs the regular schedule (again, no heater). That same noise makes 3 clicks or so a few seconds apart…then goes silent, and then clicks again 30 seconds later or so. I didn’t know what a Versaflo was before researching. On the heater itself, there’s a message that says “fault, check Versaflo.” So went to research some and it looks like my heater (just over 6 years old) has a Versaflo installed, and that’s likely what all this is, the clicking I hear is the bypass kicking in, and with the fault code and the multiple kicks I hear, it’s having hard time trying to engage? I read some other posts online that maybe there’s gravel or something that’s causing a clog. Is it simple enough to take a panel off the Versaflo and look inside, without screwing anything up? Do I need to close off any valves or anything to prevent water from leaking when opening to look? Sorry for the noob question.
Thanks!!
Got it…thank you. No replacement parts infers having to buy a new versaflo, presumably, if I want to keep the versaflo option?
If it didn't come from the factory with the Versaflo installed, there was a cover that was in place of that valve. If you have that it can be re-installed after removing the broken valve. If you don't want to get a new Versaflo if it is completely bad, and don't have the cover, it is part number R0589600, about $35.00.Got it…thank you. No replacement parts infers having to buy a new versaflo, presumably, if I want to keep the versaflo option?
Basically, yes. The motor that drives the diverter and some circuitry is behind the plate, the whole assembly needs to be removed to see if there is something preventing the diverter from moving properly.Gotcha… I think I understand better now. Found this video which really helped… I’m more visual.
So it’s basically an option of replace the entire versaflo, or remove broken versaflo and just simply replace with the cover to plug where the versaflo was located… unless somehow I get lucky and remove the plate and find something with the actuator/motor that is causing it to malfunction…but that might not be likely.
Does that sound accurate? Thanks again for the advice.
Can't hurt to disable it.Is it worth trying to change the setting on the heater to disable the bypass so it doesn’t keep clicking while the pump is running? Wasn’t sure if that mattered, to prevent any further damage…maybe it’s too late.