ANy idea of cost on the sand?
How much of a power savings would you say is the difference between your old and new pump? I need to see if I should sell my old pump and buy a smaller one.
If you measure the running current and know your electric rates you can get a close $$$ savings number. I never measured anything for savings purposes. At 100% efficiency, which is not the case, it is 746 watts per HP. So multiply by 1.5 as an efficiency fudge (just a guess on my part) and you have around 1100 watts per HP. Running a 1 HP pump for 1 hour with my ficticious efficiency fudge factor and you have 1.1 KWH (kilowatt hour). For a 1/2 HP pump it would be .55 KWH. If the electric rate is 10 cents per KWH you save around 6 cents for every hour as the difference between a 1 and 1/2 HP pump. If you run it 8 hours a day that's about a 50 cent per day saving, or about $15 a month. That little 6 cents an hour adds up. Another consideration is lower HP thus lower flow yields better filtering.
Al
Filter sand is sold in pool stores in 50# bags. It can be as low as $5/bag or as high as $13.- Shop around. If you see it for under $10, buy it. On a 200# filter, that's 4 bags....$20-$40 for your sand--and you'll have it for many, many years if you follow our suggestions. I'm the newbie here--my sand is super-young---only in its 6th season. Watermom is in season 8 or 9 and Poconos is at, what? 13 years, Al? So, if it costs you another $20 for something you'll use for 10-20 years, why spend $20 in gas to save $20 on sand? Just MHO.
There ARE tricks to easier cleaning of carts, but I don't really know them other than soaking it in electric dishwisher powder. And there's a new hose-mounted brush that's supposed to work well. Still, if you search PoolForum, you should find those techniques.
I had a small cart for a 15' Intex donut I used for 3 years. I couldn't figure out how to clean them very effectively, but they were only $10 each so I could get a month out of them--$30 for the summer here in NJ. Personally, I hate carts (like Watermom), but that's me. Other folks SWEAR by them, so before you replace it, you might want to search this and other Internet forums for techniques that make cleaning carts far more painless.
Good luck!
Carl
Actually its not the technique thats the problem. I found that using my power washer works very well to get all the gunk out. Its just a pia to get out the pressure washer, drain the filter each time, and ten pull out the cartridge. I find myself not doing it as much as I should and then the water doesnt get filtered correctlybecause of the dirty filter. Not to mention that the cartridge is about $70 or so.
Check this site:
http://www.inyopools.com/pumps_hayward.aspx
they are in Florida and I think that's where we got Watermoms pump and I'm pretty sure it was the SP2600X5. Stick with the IG pumps. They are maybe built better but the pump basket lid opens easily compared to the twist off AG pump baskets. That may be a 'general' statement. Took only 2 days for delivery if I remember right. This is the same series as my 1 HP that has been running for the 11th season now. If at all possible put it in a shelter to keep the weather off the thing. Any pump exposed to the elements will suck in water droplets when it rains and that shortens the life and makes it a dog to take apart in its later years. Someplace on this forum something like a fiberglass cover, open at both ends, was discussed. Have no idea when or where to find it but a little Googling should turn up something.
Al
You don't necessarily have to backwash every week. You just watch the pressure on your filter's guage and when the pressure rises 8-10 psi over your clean filter pressure you backwash. Backwashing is a simple process that involves turning a handle on your filter from the "filter" setting, to the "backwash" setting and letting it run for a minute or two until the water is no longer muddy looking. You then turn the handle to the "rinse" setting and let it run for about 15 seconds. Then, back to the 'filter' setting. That is it. The whole process takes about 2 or 3 minutes. Can't get much more simple than that. (Reminder --- always turn the pump off before turning the handle from one filter setting to another.) Sound easier than cleaning a cartridge filter??![]()
Actually, you don't. You backwash when the pressure goes up too much--it can be a day or a month. My filter's been on since late April and I backwashed today for the first time.
Backwashing is literally that. The six-way valve on the top or side of the filter is set so pool water is pumped in the opposite direction it normally flows--like sticking your shop-vac hose in the output to blast it clear when something's stuck. It knocks all the dirt off the sand that's been collecting.
The water is re-directed to the the waste outlet. There's usually a little glass and you watch the water start clear, go brown with dirt, and then go clear again. Then, when you set the valve back to filter, the pressure drops. Today, it dropped 6 pounds.
The hardest part of backwashing (for me) is unrolling and rolling up the backwash hose. The rest is just rotating the valve handle and watching the sight glass. One day I'll sink a pipe into one of the gutter drains that runs to the French Drain in the back that runs across everyone's property and be able to backwash without the hose as well!
Carl
Thanks for all the great input. I think I am going to take the plung and invest in the Hayward sand filter. I found it on ebay for $230 shipped and I found the sand locally for $5.99 a bag.
My question is since I already have the filter hooked up what would be the best way to swap this out? I have a shutoff valve already installed on the pump so I can close that. I just need to be able to stop the water somehow from the skimmer.
Thanks