Restricting the intake will lower electrical usage, and will not hurt the pump. (Closing off 100% of flow will!)
Restricting the intake will lower electrical usage, and will not hurt the pump. (Closing off 100% of flow will!)
Watertech's standard filter gets most of the dust and dirt but the fine one seems to get ANYTHING that precipitates.
Carl
Got the new pump up and running today. I wish we had got the smaller one for real now. I think water would be blowing out the OTHER side of the pool if the pump discharge wasn't under water. Does any one know if the new style plunger valves can be operated partially closed, or are they an ON/OFF proposition?
Thanks for all the help!
Would I be better off getting this
http://www.homedepot.com/p/Homewerks...0?N=5yc1vZbufb
And the Intex 1-1/2 adapters And another hose or the Intex plunger valve? Looks like the overall cost is going to be about the same.
This would be easier, but I don't know if it can be run partially closed.
http://www.amazon.com/Model-Intex-Pl...ds=intex+valve
I need to restrict the pump intake flow.
I'm not sure how the Intex valves are made; if they are slide valves, using them to throttle will work, but may damage the valve over time.
The ball valves would be much more suitable, but . . . Asian made no-name ball valves are TERRIBLE. I was a licensed master plumber for nearly 30 years, so I do know valves, and I have been totally bummed out by Asian made plumbing products sold by Lowes and HomeDepot. I'd recommend that you stay away from them, except as a purely temporary fix. Of course, that's pretty much what this is.
But, how are you going to connect them?
PoolDoc / Ben