Thanks Lenardo, for fixing the pics! One of our pump/filter people will be along shortly to help you with this!
Thanks Lenardo, for fixing the pics! One of our pump/filter people will be along shortly to help you with this!
Welcome to the forum!
Thanks for the pics, they help!
You've got a Hayward SuperPump and what appears to be a DE filter (Jan, DE filters' multiports are plumbed 180* backwards from sand filters' - because De filters are fed from the bottom and sand filters are fed from the top)
Please see this post for some basics on using a DE filter.
I'm wondering if you have added DE to the filter, though - perhaps it's a multiport issue, does water come out of the 'waste' port when it's set to 'filter'?
I hope this points you in the right direction, feel free to ask follow up questions![]()
Luv & Luk, Ted
Having done construction and service for 4 pool companies in 4 states starting in 1988, what I know about pools could fill a couple of books - what I don't know could fill libraries
I open the filter and i took out one by one the DE filter i think there were 8 and i never open one by one> Before i only clean it from the side with water, while i open one by one in side there was a lot i mean a lot of Green sticky stuff. i clean that and put everything together, but it still the things come out. (thing - like grass or little bugs or some else) You think I should buy a new de Filter.
http://cgi.ebay.com/Pentair-Hayward-...-/220569285759
I'm not the DE expert but I know the screens can be cleaned if they are not damaged. Pool stores will do that for a fee, but they soak them in muriatic acid to clean them. You may not need to replace them, but you may. If you replace the filter, you almost certainly need to replace the multivalve to get one compatible with your pool.
At that time you CAN choose to stay with a DE filter or switch to sand or cartridge. That's up to you.
If water is going in his skimmer and coming out dirty from what appears to be his low drain....something is probably plumbed wrong. Who puts a return so low in a pool? Of course it is POSSIBLE--there's no physical reason I know of not to put a return low.
But if it is a low return, then simply properly cleaning the filter of that goo and re-introducing DE may fix it.
Just some ideas.
Carl
Thanks for the reply.
I think I will just buy a new filter because my old one is just riped and the plastic is broken in some few spots, but if the things still come out then you think i should replace the multi valve.
IMHO, if you replace your filter, you should replace your multivalve with it.
Carl
If the grids are damaged, that will allow debris to bypass the filter (much like you describe). You can get replacement grids easily enough, but if you want a new filter - it's your pool and your choice.
However you handle this, we'll be here to proffer our best advice to enable you to have a pool that is easy and less expensive to maintain
(Jan, it's always my pleasure to be able to educate pool owners)
[edit] Carl, the company I work for installs 3 'low returns' on every new pool and 'rehab'. The reason we do it is to more efficiently heat the pool and distribute the chlorine (usually from a SWCG)
Last edited by waste; 05-29-2010 at 11:09 PM.
Luv & Luk, Ted
Having done construction and service for 4 pool companies in 4 states starting in 1988, what I know about pools could fill a couple of books - what I don't know could fill libraries
Thanks for everyones help.