Green gel inside the cell would indicate it is reaching or has reached the end of it's service life. 
A pure short would probably shut the unit down all the time so my thought is that it would have to be something that is more conductive than the surrounding salt water but not a short. I agree that it is a long shot but the current is much too high for the salt level and water temp so something is not right.Strannik said:must be something really funky in that water to increase the conductivity of scale
metal debris can cause it if they short out the plates, but that's really the only thing i can think about
The Goldline units are fixed voltage. The voltage may increase some due to the lower amps but for these units, the biggest indicator of a failing cell is the lower current.when cells are dying/get dirty you usually see the voltage go up until it reaches limit, and then current starts dropping.
mas985 said:The Goldline units are fixed voltage. The voltage may increase some due to the lower amps but for these units, the biggest indicator of a failing cell is the lower current.when cells are dying/get dirty you usually see the voltage go up until it reaches limit, and then current starts dropping.
Poolschoolgrad said:When cleaning the cell in a mild acid solution, the copper/scale mixture forms a gel or paste consistency.
mas985 said:One possibility is that you have very high salt and for some reason the test kit is not giving a correct reading. I would have believed the Taylor test kit over other tests but if the reagents are bad, then perhaps it is not indicating the correct salt level. Also, the end point is sometimes tricky. We are talking about the Taylor K-1766 test kit correct?
Another possibility is the cable might be partially shorted so it is reading higher amps than it should although the voltage of 26.6 seems too high for an amp reading of 7.99. My unit's voltage will drop below 25v when the amps is that high.
The problem I see is that the volts, amps, temperature and salt level do not fit on the SWG characteristc line so one or more of the values are incorrect. It could be a bad board, cable or test kit.
mas985 said:Well boards are pretty expensive to replace so you might just try reducing the salt level and see what happens. That could be enough to get everything to work ok.
Strannik said:if you have another unit in stock, maybe try the whole unit?
although i'd tend to agree that it's temp+salt combination that does it, or there is a short somewhere
mas985 said:What was the voltage and what was the reported salt level?
That one is high too. Normally, at 3000 ppm, 83F, my unit draws 6.3 amps.
Strannik said:btw are you measuring real current, or just going off what SWG is telling you?