Long story short, I have a suction side air leak.
I am not very mechanically inclined although I have done plumbing and pool pressure side work (replace sand).
Here are the pics. I have a Pentair Superflo VS.
You can see the bubble, that is at 1300rpm's. It gets worse at 1700 rpm's and very bad at 2200rpm's
The bubbles appear very quickly when I start the pump, so I assume they are closer (1 of the 3 unions in the picture) vs being further away where it would take at least a little bit of time to get into the basket. It's a theory, a theory based on hope, as in hope it's not under ground.
What I am showing here is the T is flat/straight

However, when I went to turn the skimmer and main drain valves, I used that to support myself and it very very easily turned cockeyed.

This is where it is turning.

My observation is the T is turning, that pipe into the pump is steady tight.
btw: I can't without a lot of force (more than I have tried) to turn off the main drain valve but I can shut the skimmer valve.
My thinking and order of operations
Shut off pump
Close skimmer valve
loosen nut on pump (not remove)
turn to tighten the pipe into the T (it's threaded)
Re-tighten nut on pump
Open skimmer valve
Restart pump to confirm fix
Am I missing something?
Thank you for your time,
I am not very mechanically inclined although I have done plumbing and pool pressure side work (replace sand).
Here are the pics. I have a Pentair Superflo VS.
You can see the bubble, that is at 1300rpm's. It gets worse at 1700 rpm's and very bad at 2200rpm's
The bubbles appear very quickly when I start the pump, so I assume they are closer (1 of the 3 unions in the picture) vs being further away where it would take at least a little bit of time to get into the basket. It's a theory, a theory based on hope, as in hope it's not under ground.
What I am showing here is the T is flat/straight

However, when I went to turn the skimmer and main drain valves, I used that to support myself and it very very easily turned cockeyed.

This is where it is turning.

My observation is the T is turning, that pipe into the pump is steady tight.
btw: I can't without a lot of force (more than I have tried) to turn off the main drain valve but I can shut the skimmer valve.
My thinking and order of operations
Shut off pump
Close skimmer valve
loosen nut on pump (not remove)
turn to tighten the pipe into the T (it's threaded)
Re-tighten nut on pump
Open skimmer valve
Restart pump to confirm fix
Am I missing something?
Thank you for your time,