Thank you for taking the time to respond!
@Lake Placid
As long as the air bleed tube fits tight, and it has a strainer of sorts on it that is not torn, the it’s not your issue.
I was definitely confused about this because my air bleed tube appears to be just a solid piece of plastic without any kind of strainer.
If you inspected the grids, and you had no tears in the fabric, and the plastic frames aren’t breaking down, that would rule out DE entering through the grids.
Confirmed. There are no tears in the fabric, and the plastic frames are in good condition.
Other causes of DE entering - the standpipe on those filters should have an o-ring in a groove on the top of the standpipe. It’s where the grid assembly inserts on to. If it’s missing, it can allow DE back into the pool.
I can confirm that the o-ring is not missing on the standpipe. However, I found it difficult to get the filter manifold assembly to line up perfectly with the standpipe. However, in the end, I believe I got it to line up well.
Next suspect would be a failing multi port.
Got it. Perhaps this is what I should look into next. How would you go about inspecting the condition of this part? My pool system appears to have a "push pull slide valve" rather than an MPV.
If those are all intact, it coukd be the grid assembly wasn’t fully seated allowing DE to enter. You may have corrected that when you inspected and reassembled.
That makes sense. I disassembled and cleaned the filter assembly about a month ago, and it has been working properly since then, but it’s possible something wasn't fully seated. Could running the filter pump at a low rpm (1250) for several hours have caused a condition for DE to leak out that was not present at higher rpms?
What’s your TA?…..you’re also on the right track with reducing spillover runtime.
I've been keeping TA at around 50 since it seems to be easiest to keep the Ph in order that way. I've tried bumping TA up to around 80, but that requires me to use much more MA to keep Ph in check.
In summary, because the problem with DE leaking into the pool started right after I closed the spa spillover valve, I'm really hesitant to close that valve again. However, it would be nice to stop the constant spillover since I figure it would make TA and Ph easier to manage. If it was your pool, would you close the spa spillover valve again and see if the leaking DE issue continues, or would you approach it differently?