The time has come. After 10+ years, my pool pump motor is making horrible sounds. 1hp single speed, Starite PEA6E-124L pump, 12,000 gallon pool, 1.5" piping, cartidge filter, and an aqua rite salt chlorinator. No other features, no water falls, no automatic pool cleaners, no solar hot water, nothing. I would replace/install myself.
Was thinking about a two speed but then need a new two speed timer and then I'm not really saving much over a variable speed.
So I've been researching variable speeds all weekend and I think I've narrowed it down to two models. The biggest headache seems to be salt chlorinators. I've read about current sensing relays, but so far, I've yet to see a single well described setup, and I feel it's more people read about it, and keep passing that idea along (like me now too), then it actually being implemented. I'm amazed by the lack of built in support for salt chlorinators in many of these pumps that come with their own timers. Are people really also then installing new "smart" control systems? Are current sensing relay 'hacks' really common?
I've also read ideas of just leaving the salt chlorinator on 24/7 and letting the flow sensor trigger it, but don't like that idea.
So to try and keep things simple, I've narrowed it down to either just getting a new variable speed motor, century v-green 165 or 270, or a whole new pump, jandy VSFHP165JEP or VSFHP270JEP. These are the only ones that some models have a builtin auxiliary relay. It looks like the v-green square flange will mount on my existing starite pump.
But there's always a catch. The smaller 1.65 hp v-green doesn't have the auxiliary relay to trigger my salt chlorinator, the 270 does. I think it's the same with the jandy, but hard to tell. Is jandy just the century motors attached to a pump? I see pics of the jandy 1.65 and I see two wiring ports on the case, but their instruction manual does not specifically state which models have the auxiliary relay.
So I'm torn on what to do
1) Cheapest route is get the v-green 165, pick a low speed but still enough flow for the salt, disable onboard timer, and then just continue to use my existing timer. When I need to clean the pool, I can still manually override on the v-green for full power.
2) Get the v-green 270 and rewire my salt chlorinator to run from it's aux relays.
If I end up going the v-green 270, should I just spend the money then and get a whole new pump, the jandy VSFHP270JEP ? I like that they state I can move the onboard timer to the wall. Don't know if I really want the timer getting rained on constantly here in FL. I 'think' I can also remotely mount the v-green timer?
Another big question I have is, why all these large hp numbers? I currently have just 1hp. Is there really any savings in getting a 2.7hp motor that at it's slowest, it still 3/4 hp? Even the smaller ones are still 1.65hp! I do see smaller 1hp/.25hp models, but none of them have an auxillary relay.
Was thinking about a two speed but then need a new two speed timer and then I'm not really saving much over a variable speed.
So I've been researching variable speeds all weekend and I think I've narrowed it down to two models. The biggest headache seems to be salt chlorinators. I've read about current sensing relays, but so far, I've yet to see a single well described setup, and I feel it's more people read about it, and keep passing that idea along (like me now too), then it actually being implemented. I'm amazed by the lack of built in support for salt chlorinators in many of these pumps that come with their own timers. Are people really also then installing new "smart" control systems? Are current sensing relay 'hacks' really common?
I've also read ideas of just leaving the salt chlorinator on 24/7 and letting the flow sensor trigger it, but don't like that idea.
So to try and keep things simple, I've narrowed it down to either just getting a new variable speed motor, century v-green 165 or 270, or a whole new pump, jandy VSFHP165JEP or VSFHP270JEP. These are the only ones that some models have a builtin auxiliary relay. It looks like the v-green square flange will mount on my existing starite pump.
But there's always a catch. The smaller 1.65 hp v-green doesn't have the auxiliary relay to trigger my salt chlorinator, the 270 does. I think it's the same with the jandy, but hard to tell. Is jandy just the century motors attached to a pump? I see pics of the jandy 1.65 and I see two wiring ports on the case, but their instruction manual does not specifically state which models have the auxiliary relay.
So I'm torn on what to do
1) Cheapest route is get the v-green 165, pick a low speed but still enough flow for the salt, disable onboard timer, and then just continue to use my existing timer. When I need to clean the pool, I can still manually override on the v-green for full power.
2) Get the v-green 270 and rewire my salt chlorinator to run from it's aux relays.
If I end up going the v-green 270, should I just spend the money then and get a whole new pump, the jandy VSFHP270JEP ? I like that they state I can move the onboard timer to the wall. Don't know if I really want the timer getting rained on constantly here in FL. I 'think' I can also remotely mount the v-green timer?
Another big question I have is, why all these large hp numbers? I currently have just 1hp. Is there really any savings in getting a 2.7hp motor that at it's slowest, it still 3/4 hp? Even the smaller ones are still 1.65hp! I do see smaller 1hp/.25hp models, but none of them have an auxillary relay.