Re: Who loves their Polaris 380?
Quote:
Originally Posted by jenmenke
Man. Makes me really wonder what the deal is with ME? Or better; with my Polaris. So NO ONE ELSE sits there at the side of their pool and watches it endlessly. Watches it go back over the same spots over and over. ...Then tweak the directional nozzle on the back and watch it some more.
I have put on new wheels. Polaris sent me a new timer valves that backs it up twice as often, which has helped some, but it also has increased the time it takes to clean because it is spending so much time backing up and away instead of cleaning.
It DOES eventually clean the pool. It does miss large areas on the incline between the deep and shallow ends. I use a brush and redistribute the dirt and keep it going. I DO use the sand/silt bag because it works better for me. I just can't imagine buying one of these knowing what I know over something like a Dolphin. But I guess I'm really in the minority. And it makes me wonder if my cleaner is a lemon.
Don't know if this will help but I was talking to the regional Mgr. of the pool store that I work at part time. We sell Polaris and he told me the biggest problem with them not working properly is often caused by the hose being either a bit too long or a bit too short. He seems to know a lot about pool cleaners and has had training from Polaris and Barracuda on their lines. He also said that return jets hitting the hose can cause the cleaner to miss areas of the pool.
Don't know how true any of this is but I was told these things in case I had to try and diagnose a customer complaint and the store I work at is EXTREMELY customer service oriented. If the customer is not happy we do whatever we can to make them happy.
Re: Who loves their Polaris 380?
I really appreciate your comments, waterbear (is it al? Evan? something like that I think).
You are correct about the hose length. I went thru all those steps with a very helpful customer service team. I did shorten my hose a bit last season. It did help immensely. I added the shorter cylce valve. I tried new wheels (and switched back). The customer service was exceptional. I just still find myself spending untold hours fiddling with the damn thing. I don't think I'm being anal, but maybe I am. I just think a large swath of dirt on the incline looks bad. I even used to get INTO the pool and drive the stupid thing around myself! But it did get better with the new valve and the shorter hose. In addition, I bought a PoolBuster and now I just use that. It beats the heck out of hooking up my manual vacuum and hose. I guess in hindsight, I just really wish I knew about the Dolphin before I bought the Polaris. At least it wouldn't be so RANDOM.
I appreciate everyone's comments. I do really have to wonder if there is something else going on with mine...
Re: Who loves their Polaris 380?
If it makes you feel any better, I also have a 20x40 IG and am having trouble with mine too. It cleans the entire pool except for one corner. The weird thing is that the first two years I owned it, it worked perfectly, but now, I can't seem to get it adjusted just right. My pool guy told me to set the jet to the 2:00 position. An earlier post here said 11:00, so I am going to try that instead. I think it's just a matter of getting it adjusted correctly. I wish I would have noticed how it was set when it was working well. But that was back when I was a naive pool owner and didn't realize that there was even an adjustment.
Re: Who loves their Polaris 380?
While it is important to find the right adjustment(s) to make in order to get your Polaris operating well, I thought I'd mention something I've noticed about our Polaris 380. The method and efficiency of operation seem to be directly correlated to the water temperature. Simply put, ours roams entirely differently when the water temp is 55 degrees than it does when the water temp is 85 degrees. I have always assumed that it has something to do with a change in the density??? of the water at various temperatures. At lower temps, it runs in a more compact and straight line pattern and remains for the most part on the floor of the pool. With warmer temps, it is much more random, covers every square inch and readily climbs the sides of the pool. Just thought I would mention this. For some people it might not hurt to wait to adjust the Polaris until the water comes up to average summertime temps. In my experience, it's just not going to act in April or May like it does in July or August. I'll let the science pros on the board explain to us why.
Re: Who loves their Polaris 380?
I've noted the same difference in operation but think it is due to the hose being less flexible in cold water than in warm water.
Re: Who loves their Polaris 380?
Have you checked the RPM of the unit?? I have a 280 and the RPM must be between 28-32. If its to high the cleaner just flies all over the place. Read your manual..it tells you how to adjust it.
Re: Who loves their Polaris 380?
I have a 380 and don't like it either. It does not cover my whole pool. For me, my 380 is just a $900 squart gun and pool toy that the kids play with.
Also it seems counter productive to use the 380 for 5 hours to clean the pool when my 13 year old son can do it in less then 20 minutes with the manual vaccume.
I would not buy it again.
Re: Who loves their Polaris 380?
We HATE ours as well. We have a fiberglass pool with many articulations. First we had to get wheels that have suction cups on them to move around the pool. Then once we got it to move, it gets stuck on every curve so it just sits there. Anyone want one? We are looking at the Aquabot. That looks like it has treads (kind of like a tank) and not wheels. Does anyone have anything like that? Our thought is that it would not get stuck on the curves of our pool. Any suggestions?
Re: Who loves their Polaris 380?
I have a love-hate relationship with mine. I love how it is integrated with my Jandy controller so I can set it to run when I want and forget about it. But I hate that it is always getting wrapped up on itself and gets hung up. If I don't catch it, I am just wasting money running it. I too have spent countless hours trying to adjust the thing. I did the tail adjustment to keep it from squirting my windows, and that helped. Whe it dies, I will probably buy an Aquabot or something similar.
-Rick-
Re: Who loves their Polaris 380?
While I have always loved my 380 I am about to replace it. If anyone wants one let me know. The problem was not with the unit itself, it was that I developed a leak in the feed line somewhere between the pump and the outside wall of the pool. Since it is under a concrete deck my pool builder told me it would cost $500 to cut the concrete fix the leak (he assumes it is right at the wall) and then patch the concrete. If it turns out to be somewhere else well there will be more money spent. Since I have used it for 7 or 8 seasons I am not sure how much life the pump will have left nor the unit itself. Further, it is expensive to run as I have to run my main pool pump and the booster pump for it to work. So, rather than spend good money after bad I decided to spend $1,000 and buy a Dolphin Dynamic -- just ordered it today.