- Jun 17, 2024
- 39
- Pool Size
- 11000
- Surface
- Plaster
- Chlorine
- Salt Water Generator
- SWG Type
- Pentair iChlor 30
I have an air bleed somewhere in my system. Bubbles are ejected from floor/spa jets. I've read durn near every article here and am still stuck.
Based on posts in this forum, I have tried the following.
I replaced both O-rings on pump, inlet and outlet cuz the outlet was leaking. Now no leak. Got that fixed.
If I start pump, let it run a few minutes (usual bubbling on startup), and release trapped air from sand filter using release valve, then no bubbles for a while. Come back 10 minutes later, open release valve, more air comes out. So it's coming in and building up somewhere.
I can see air in the pump through the pump lid, and in check valves anywhere water is flowing in the system.
I've positioned valves to take water in from floor only, pool skimmer only, and spa only. Still bubbles. That narrows down the possible culprits to the jandy valve and pipes closest to the pump inlet.
I removed/lubed/reinstalled O-ring on pump lid.
I removed and replaced electric jandy valve assembly closest to the pump inlet. Did not remove/replace O-rings cuz there was water flowing out of that junction from the pool and I wasn't sure if that was normal (it is, sometimes) so I put it back on with alacrity.
The o-rings appear to be in good shape, still have tension, and I removed some grit when dis/reassembling.
I sprayed shaving cream all over every connection going from the jandy valve to the pump. No apparent in-suck of cream.
I tried running hose water over every connection, still bubbles.
When I stop the pump, there is no squirt, leak, or drip of water anywhere.
At this point, I could take a shot in the dark and replace all the o-rings in the remaining usual suspects: pump lid and jandy valve. But I'd rather not start just randomly replacing stuff hoping it'll help. That can be a long, expensive, troublesome road.
Are there any other ways to determine where the leak is, other than random part replacement? Any other symptoms I could look for? Other tests besides shaving cream?
Totally at a loss here, desperate for help. I suspect most pool techs would just replace those O-rings (usual suspects), charge me buncha $, and it might not even fix it.
Based on posts in this forum, I have tried the following.
I replaced both O-rings on pump, inlet and outlet cuz the outlet was leaking. Now no leak. Got that fixed.
If I start pump, let it run a few minutes (usual bubbling on startup), and release trapped air from sand filter using release valve, then no bubbles for a while. Come back 10 minutes later, open release valve, more air comes out. So it's coming in and building up somewhere.
I can see air in the pump through the pump lid, and in check valves anywhere water is flowing in the system.
I've positioned valves to take water in from floor only, pool skimmer only, and spa only. Still bubbles. That narrows down the possible culprits to the jandy valve and pipes closest to the pump inlet.
I removed/lubed/reinstalled O-ring on pump lid.
I removed and replaced electric jandy valve assembly closest to the pump inlet. Did not remove/replace O-rings cuz there was water flowing out of that junction from the pool and I wasn't sure if that was normal (it is, sometimes) so I put it back on with alacrity.
The o-rings appear to be in good shape, still have tension, and I removed some grit when dis/reassembling.
I sprayed shaving cream all over every connection going from the jandy valve to the pump. No apparent in-suck of cream.
I tried running hose water over every connection, still bubbles.
When I stop the pump, there is no squirt, leak, or drip of water anywhere.
At this point, I could take a shot in the dark and replace all the o-rings in the remaining usual suspects: pump lid and jandy valve. But I'd rather not start just randomly replacing stuff hoping it'll help. That can be a long, expensive, troublesome road.
Are there any other ways to determine where the leak is, other than random part replacement? Any other symptoms I could look for? Other tests besides shaving cream?
Totally at a loss here, desperate for help. I suspect most pool techs would just replace those O-rings (usual suspects), charge me buncha $, and it might not even fix it.