Poconos is best with motors. Sounds like a bearing has worn out.
I have a 1.5hp with service factor of 1.1 and it has started to get loud. I have a 15000 gallon pool with DE filter with solar heating on roof; suction vacuum and SWG. I am in central FL
I have been researching the Marathon imPower and was wondering if anyone has any experience with this motor.
It appears it should be a plug in replacement. I am also looking at the energy saving as a factor.
Thanks
BB
Poconos is best with motors. Sounds like a bearing has worn out.
Carl
I'm going to have to get back to this.
Briefly: the imPower is a variable frequency pump -- driven by electronics -- that has only 3 speeds, and some rather odd behavior. This means, it will NOT do the sorts of things a full VFD pump will, but on the other hand, it doesn't cost a lot more than a electromechanical 2-speed motor.
One important point to consider: electronics and lightning don't mix well, as a rule. Florida has lots of lightning, and VFD pumps (including the imPower motor) have lots of electronics. Depending on your actual pump make, and your plumbing layout, a better option (more reliable and just as efficient) might be a electro-mechanical hi-E 2-speed motor, with a electro-mechanical timer. The imPower motor may be marginal in your situation, and the description of energy savings appears to make assumptions unlikely to apply to your situation.
(Generally, the electronic pumps seem to make energy savings claims that are based on a-typical circumstances, or else apples to oranges comparisons.)
PoolDoc / Ben
I agree CarlD that it is most likely a bearing.
Thanks PoolDoc for your feedback. The guys at a few of the local pool stores say the ImPower is the way to go, but when I ask a few simple questions about the motor none of them can give me a good answer.
I was considering 2 speed motors before the Impower and the cost different was not that great. But I could not find any review on the Impower (reliability, energy saving etc).
My pump is a Sta-Rite Dura-Glas with A.O. smith motor with single timer, and my pumping layout is pretty clean 2" PVC the intake side has the drain, vacuum, and skimmer all have 2 way valves that goes to the pump. The pump goes into the filter(DE Hayward 48) and the filter goes to solar and then goes thru the SWG. The solar has an automatic value and an equalizer value. Then back to the pool returns jet, fountain, and two jets all have 2 way valves. When the solar is on the filter pressure increases about 10psi.
HTML Code:filter-----------------| SWG-------- | | pump |_______ |--| _______| | | | | | | | | return solar intake
PoolDoc is there any ectro-mechanical hi-E 2-speed motors that you prefer.
thanks again
Yeah. They want YOU to be one of the people WRITING the reviews . . . and they are hoping they will be good ones. But it sounds like they don't know. (New product designs = unreliable products -- no matter WHO the manufacturer is!)
As far as 2 speed motors, I've mostly bought them WITH the pumps. The motor-only purchases have been AO Smith, but that was just because that was what I could get.
PoolDoc / Ben
AO Smith, now owned by Regal Beloit, is the primary OEM motor supplier for most residential pool pumps so they would be a good replacement. They have recently come out with a high efficiency two speed motor which uses a run capacitor on low speed as well as high speed. They are claiming a 20% improvement on low speed with this new motor. Unfortunately, it only comes in a 56y frame at this point.
You can find more information here:
http://www.aosmithmotors.com/WorkAre...mID=2147483754
Mark
Hydraulics 101; Pump Ed 101; Pump/Pool Spreadsheets; Pump Run Time Study; DIY Acid Dosing; DIY Cover Roller
18'x36' 20k plaster, MaxFlo SP2303VSP, Aqualogic PS8 SWCG, 420 sq-ft Cartridge, Solar, 6 jet spa, 1 HP jet pump, 400k BTU NG Heater
Mark, I've been doing some work with the Calif state ratings, and have been surprised at some of the efficiency figures. I looked, but could not find, any data on AO Smith's motor efficiency. Have you seen any data on that?
No but I talked with a rep and he said that AO Smith does not publish their efficiency data directly but he did say that the numbers in the CEC database are probably correct. He also confirmed the 20% improvement noted in the brochure. Theoretically, a low speed 20% efficiency improvement is predictable with the addition of a run capacitor. A typical two speed motor does not use a run capacitor on low speed so the efficiency of the motor is about half of that on high speed. Because the motor is significantly underloaded due to the speed change, the power factor is quite low so there is quite a bit of I^2R losses in the motor. The run capacitor shifts the current more in line with the voltage so the power factor increases and total current decrease improving the efficiency of the motor. But again, this efficiency improvement is only on low speed.
Mark
Hydraulics 101; Pump Ed 101; Pump/Pool Spreadsheets; Pump Run Time Study; DIY Acid Dosing; DIY Cover Roller
18'x36' 20k plaster, MaxFlo SP2303VSP, Aqualogic PS8 SWCG, 420 sq-ft Cartridge, Solar, 6 jet spa, 1 HP jet pump, 400k BTU NG Heater
Interesting. If I'm understanding what I'm reading in the California data, that would me the new 2speed motor significantly more efficient on low speed than the VFD motors. I was amazed to see that some of them are reported run as low as 33% efficiency!
Yes, the efficiency on low speed is quite low. Besides the power factor, the main reason for low efficiency is the secondary winding is much thinner (higher gauge) wire than than the primary winding so it has very high resistance. That is the only way they can make a dual winding motor with the same diameter as the single speeds. Improving the power factor helps but improving 45% efficiency by 20% is still only 54% efficiency and that is not better than a VS at any speed.
A VS can maintain high efficiency down to the lowest speeds because it changes the line frequency and voltage plus it always uses the same winding. One thing to note is the Intelliflo shows a higher efficiency at all speeds while the EcoStar shows a significant decrease in motor efficiency (33%) but that can't really be true because the EcoStar has a much better energy factor at 1000 RPM speed than the Intelliflo. Plus the wire to water efficiency of the EcoStar is 35% (Curve-C) at 1000 RPM which cannot be higher than the motor efficiency so there is clearly an issue with some of the data. Other issues with the data include the Whisperflo where the Whisperflo full rate and up rated version of the same THP pump should be identical and in some cases they are way off. However, from my own observations, most of the data seems to be pretty reasonable but there some glaring errors.
Mark
Hydraulics 101; Pump Ed 101; Pump/Pool Spreadsheets; Pump Run Time Study; DIY Acid Dosing; DIY Cover Roller
18'x36' 20k plaster, MaxFlo SP2303VSP, Aqualogic PS8 SWCG, 420 sq-ft Cartridge, Solar, 6 jet spa, 1 HP jet pump, 400k BTU NG Heater
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