The plan is to swap sensors. If that doesn’t work. I’ll put the pump in stand alone get water moving to see if in fact the air temp is affecting the resistance to give an invalid reading and go from there.
I get that. I probably need to just skip the heater portion because it comes up before all the sensors and then come back and add it.Or pick a different startup option.It is probably not a bad sensor.
It is not because there is no flow.
You have to tell it that there is a water temperature sensor.
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If you have a heater that you want the automation to control you must have a water-temp sensor, you don't use them if you only have a spa. The third sensor is not for a spa but for a solar heater if you have that. For the system to work properly you have to have the two, water and air.I have been to Hayward training a few times. I just wanted to know if the sensor selected for water had to actually be in water…not much info on that. I have a ton of sensors left from OmniPL installs. They send 3 in case you have a spa but most installs it’s just a pool.
I know that. I was saying I have a bunch of sensors left over because most systems only use 2 but they always send 3.If you have a heater that you want the automation to control you must have a water-temp sensor, you don't use them if you only have a spa. The third sensor is not for a spa but for a solar heater if you have that. For the system to work properly you have to have the two, water and air.