- May 27, 2021
- 1,399
- Pool Size
- 17000
- Surface
- Fiberglass
- Chlorine
- Salt Water Generator
- SWG Type
- Pentair Intellichlor IC-40
I will try this today and see if flow rate improves at all. Will post results shortly.You can do it with the pump running. Mandatory to open valve 8 all the way first. It shouldn’t technically matter the sequence of the other 2, but closing 9 first will stop flow through the heater before closing the outlet side. You won’t put un-necssary pressure on the heat exchanger vs closing 10 first which would allow pressurized water to get trapped in the heat exchanger. Always close and open the valves slowly.
Reverse the sequence when opening. Open 10, then 9, then tweak 8. Although depending on what happens to flow with the heater bypassed, valve positions may need to be tweaked to get the desired flow rate.
I adjusted valves as you said. Unfortunately, there was no increase in the flow rate with Valve 8 fully open and 9 and 10 closed, so I returned the valves to their original positions. Sounds like I can pretty much rule out any valves and lack of by pass for heater as the source of the low flow rate reading. That leaves me with the following potential issues causing the low reading at the flow meter:You can do it with the pump running. Mandatory to open valve 8 all the way first. It shouldn’t technically matter the sequence of the other 2, but closing 9 first will stop flow through the heater before closing the outlet side. You won’t put un-necssary pressure on the heat exchanger vs closing 10 first which would allow pressurized water to get trapped in the heat exchanger. Always close and open the valves slowly.
Reverse the sequence when opening. Open 10, then 9, then tweak 8. Although depending on what happens to flow with the heater bypassed, valve positions may need to be tweaked to get the desired flow rate.
Yep. I tapped on that gauge with the pump off and it dropped to 0. Was just stuck.That one is around 20 psi so I think it has an issue. Try tapping the dial with the pump off to see if the needle moves.
The concern I have is what does that actually mean? Is it hydraulically inefficient because it should be 4”, 6”, 8” in diameter?….. or because it has too many restrictive fittings….or because anything? They have not defined the actual root cause, which leaves you with a potential fix that could mean re-plumbing everything depending on the knowledge/expertise of the diagnostician….Call me pessimistic but their diagnosis/proposed solution leaves me feeling a bit queasy.Hydraulically Inefficent Plumbing (Remedy: Replace sections of plumbing that may be restricting flow.) (Recommended by pool company.)