SoDel
Well-known member
- May 27, 2022
- 515
- Pool Size
- 15000
- Surface
- Plaster
- Chlorine
- Salt Water Generator
- SWG Type
- Hayward Turbo Cell (T-CELL-5)
Excellent analysis! To sort of zero in on one point though, whether air or water cooled, running a pump without it actually pumping will heat the water in the basket due to friction so there‘s possibly some speed and some degree of suction side leak where it will boil off the water in the basket and run dry (or possibly explode from steam). Also, as you highlight, stop filtering and chlorinating. Very powerful pumps do explode if deadheaded as a result of this type of heating. A pool pump might, at worst, just self-destruct some internals as you mentioned — I don’t know either way (and not willing to find out lol).Yeah I doubt the pump itself will wear out, but like you said the seals will.
I'm not an expert here, but the way these pump seals work is they use a thin film of the fluid they are pumping (water) as the lubricating surface the spinning part of the seal and the fixed part of the seal. Running the pumps dry for too long will damage the sealing surface and lead to leaks. Leaks lead to bearings dying. Saw this happen on my hot tub where a leak on the seal for a long time caused the bearing to die. I could tell it was a long time due to the rust on the pump end of the motor that didn't exist on the other side of the motor.
That said, although I never got around to doing it, this leak just killed the bearing, and with a little clean up work I'd be able to replace the bearing and seal and bring the pump back to normal working condition. I bought a new pump and my plan was to repair the old one to have on hand to swap when the second hot tub pump had a seal leak/bearing issue. Then I could swap it out and fix the old pump at my leisure. I no longer have the hot tub, but I kept the pump. I'll probably find a project to use the motor in at some point in the future.
My gut feeling aligns with you, that you should run the pump on priming speed when you kick it on for a bit in case there was a small leak that let air in, before dropping back down to your normal low speed. In theory nothing has leaked and running at low speed is fine, but if some did than you won't be pumping any water and having air churning up in the pump head could lead to increased seal wear. Still, I don't personally see that leading to pump death at low speed unless the motor isn't air cooled and instead is water cooled, but you also would not be circulating any water which would pool issues over a period of days, especially if you have a SWCG which is no longer producing chlorine due to lack of flow.
(edit — another minute of thought and I don’t see a way for a pool pump to flash water to steam so I’m guessing it can’t explode. Interesting discussion
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