Hi!
This forum has been excellent at helping me get the old pool I got last season up and running, and I was hoping I could breath some life back into my old gas pool heater before it truly bites the dust.
It's a Natural Gas Hayward H300-ED1, configured to use 120v. It's on a 20A Breaker.
See attached photos.
It worked fine until a short storm over the weekend and this morning showed no signs of life.
Opening it up I checked that the power leads from the breaker and they showed power.
Since not even the system status LED was going on and I did not detect any low voltage on the boards, tested the transformer, and could not detect any voltage on the LV side.
Testing the terminals on the transformer for resistance showed only .25 between the not used Orange and the white. All other combinations on the HV and LV side did not return any resistance.
Is this as simple as a blown transformer?
If yes what is the correct one to replace this?
Is there anything else I can check on the circuit board or other components to see if perhaps something else caused the transformer to go?
Any help would be appreciated!!
This forum has been excellent at helping me get the old pool I got last season up and running, and I was hoping I could breath some life back into my old gas pool heater before it truly bites the dust.
It's a Natural Gas Hayward H300-ED1, configured to use 120v. It's on a 20A Breaker.
See attached photos.
It worked fine until a short storm over the weekend and this morning showed no signs of life.
Opening it up I checked that the power leads from the breaker and they showed power.
Since not even the system status LED was going on and I did not detect any low voltage on the boards, tested the transformer, and could not detect any voltage on the LV side.
Testing the terminals on the transformer for resistance showed only .25 between the not used Orange and the white. All other combinations on the HV and LV side did not return any resistance.
Is this as simple as a blown transformer?
If yes what is the correct one to replace this?
Is there anything else I can check on the circuit board or other components to see if perhaps something else caused the transformer to go?
Any help would be appreciated!!
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