Posting this for someone who might find themselves in the same situation...
I’ve had my pool for about 8 years now and have been troubleshooting a lot of my problems myself this year, starting with replacing the salt cell, to replacing the Hayward Aquarite Goldline main board and most recently dealing with the Raypak heater smoking and producing a lot of soot. I had a pool service come by once at the start of the season when the heater wasn’t working at all after the same smoke and soot issue. They brushed the and hosed off the heat exchanger and replaced the thermal cutoff fuse. They charged me $50 for a part that‘s $12.00 on Amazon, but I needed to get my pool going and didn’t even know where to start. From what I’ve learned, these fuses are one time use and if the heater starts to have problems, this thing burns out to avoid the heater overheating. I’ve since bough a couple of spares to have on hand just in case.
Well, nothing makes you learn better than experience and necessity. There are a ton of videos on YouTube, so when the heater started acting up again, I decided to DIY it knowing that I very well might end up having to call in a pro. The RayPak heaters have a common problem with soot build up on the heat exchanger. After pulling the cover off, I could see the soot and carbon buildup on the heat exchanger and the horizontal bars were corroded and falling apart. I removed the bars (I don’t know what purpose these bars serve - can anyone tell me?) and used a wire brush to scrub the heat exchanger. I then used a garden hose to spray it down with some pressure. Same process with the bars. A TON of soot and Crud came out the bottom front of the unit. I know I should have removed the burner tray because the soot can clog the burners, but I didn’t want to go through the hassle of disconnecting the gas line and water in/out feeds to access it, as this was my first time working on a heater of any sort. And I don’t think the pool service I used the last time did that. I let it dry for a bit, replaced the thermal cutoff fuse and then put it all back together, fired it up and “click”… nothing. The heater normally makes a bzzt bzzt bzzt sound before lighting. Nope. Just one click.
Back onto YouTube and decide to clean or replace the igniter. After figuring out what’s what and how to remove the assembly, I scrub the fork and the contact with some sandpaper and brush the nozzle with an old toothbrush, reassemble and turn it on. Click, bzzt bzzt bzzzt (hey, it’s working!) but it doesn’t light and I get an error message saying the Pilot isn’t recognized. Turn it off and back on again to see if I get the same error, grab some coffee and sit down with my iPad to go back on YouTube. I look up and see heat ripples coming off the heater. Stick my hand in the pool jets and it’s coming out warm. Go to the heater and the display reads “heating”. Finally fixed. The real trick will be if the heater lights and kicks on with the pool timer tomorrow morning.
I don’t know how much longer this heater will last. From what I read 8-12 years is the average lifespan. We’ll see.
I’ve had my pool for about 8 years now and have been troubleshooting a lot of my problems myself this year, starting with replacing the salt cell, to replacing the Hayward Aquarite Goldline main board and most recently dealing with the Raypak heater smoking and producing a lot of soot. I had a pool service come by once at the start of the season when the heater wasn’t working at all after the same smoke and soot issue. They brushed the and hosed off the heat exchanger and replaced the thermal cutoff fuse. They charged me $50 for a part that‘s $12.00 on Amazon, but I needed to get my pool going and didn’t even know where to start. From what I’ve learned, these fuses are one time use and if the heater starts to have problems, this thing burns out to avoid the heater overheating. I’ve since bough a couple of spares to have on hand just in case.
Well, nothing makes you learn better than experience and necessity. There are a ton of videos on YouTube, so when the heater started acting up again, I decided to DIY it knowing that I very well might end up having to call in a pro. The RayPak heaters have a common problem with soot build up on the heat exchanger. After pulling the cover off, I could see the soot and carbon buildup on the heat exchanger and the horizontal bars were corroded and falling apart. I removed the bars (I don’t know what purpose these bars serve - can anyone tell me?) and used a wire brush to scrub the heat exchanger. I then used a garden hose to spray it down with some pressure. Same process with the bars. A TON of soot and Crud came out the bottom front of the unit. I know I should have removed the burner tray because the soot can clog the burners, but I didn’t want to go through the hassle of disconnecting the gas line and water in/out feeds to access it, as this was my first time working on a heater of any sort. And I don’t think the pool service I used the last time did that. I let it dry for a bit, replaced the thermal cutoff fuse and then put it all back together, fired it up and “click”… nothing. The heater normally makes a bzzt bzzt bzzt sound before lighting. Nope. Just one click.
Back onto YouTube and decide to clean or replace the igniter. After figuring out what’s what and how to remove the assembly, I scrub the fork and the contact with some sandpaper and brush the nozzle with an old toothbrush, reassemble and turn it on. Click, bzzt bzzt bzzzt (hey, it’s working!) but it doesn’t light and I get an error message saying the Pilot isn’t recognized. Turn it off and back on again to see if I get the same error, grab some coffee and sit down with my iPad to go back on YouTube. I look up and see heat ripples coming off the heater. Stick my hand in the pool jets and it’s coming out warm. Go to the heater and the display reads “heating”. Finally fixed. The real trick will be if the heater lights and kicks on with the pool timer tomorrow morning.
I don’t know how much longer this heater will last. From what I read 8-12 years is the average lifespan. We’ll see.