So, I have ordered the zinc plug, but found this whole incident a bit unsettling. Here's what happened.
I was backwashing my filter, and after returning the slide valve to its "filter" position, I restarted the pump. Immediately, water began pouring out of the heater. I immediately shut off the pump, and opened the bypass valves to divert water away from the heater. I opened the side panel of the heater, and there was the heavily corroded, 3/4" pipe plug sitting in the bottom. The plug had corroded to the point where the threads were barely holding in the hole. They were weakened to the point that the pressure from the pump start-up blew the plug out of its hole in the header. Had I not been present when this happened (i.e., every morning when the pump automatically starts at 7am), 32K gallons of saltwater would have been freely flowing into the basement of my pool house (where the equipment is located). Once things dried out, I inspected the header. There are rust stains below the hole (threads leaking as they rusted), and around the inside threads in the header. I don't think Zinc corrodes with an orange color, so I can only assume that the unit was shipped with a galvanized iron, not zinc, plug in it. Pentair is now calling for a zinc plug in the unit's parts list.
I am super diligent about my chemistry, keeping my salt level at 3000, my pH between 7.6-7.7, and my TA around 60. Those numbers are very stable.
This is a 3 year old Pentair MasterTemp 400 heater. Is it normal to have to replace this anode plug every couple of years? My old Jandy/Laars heater gave me 8 years before the heat exchanger started to leak. Frankly, after this episode, I'm thinking of replacing the anode plug EVERY year, since zinc will corrode faster than galvanized iron.
I'm curious to find out if others have had this issue. Thanks.
Eric