Hi, Luigi,
I have never been a fan of check valves......because of the problems they cause.
Would your system function without one?
Hi, Luigi,
I have never been a fan of check valves......because of the problems they cause.
Would your system function without one?
As far as I know there are two kinds of check valves. Spring loaded and flap. Spring loaded are closed even with zero flow. Flap require some minimum flow to operate. Spring type may be sensitive to the chemical makeup of the fluid since they probably have a metal spring. As with Dave, I'm not a fan of check valves. They restrict flow to some degree and are prone to problems such as gunk on the sealing surfaces. They do have their use in specific situations but I think they are over prescribed. Just my quarters worth.
Al
I am not sure why the valve is there but I have a theory. The filter is one story
below the pool and two stories below the solar panels. When the pump stops,
water flows back freely from the solar panels (or they would get scrunched
by atmospheric pressure). Without a valve, this might cause a backflow through
the filter housing and possibly back into the pool through the skimmer.
Having seen how grimey the water is in the dirty side of the filter housing,
I can see how this should be avoided.
Luigi
30'x16' (irregular) indoor gunite/plaster pool, 10k gal,
Autopilot DLG-220 with SC-48 cell, 3/4 HP recirc pump,
solar panels, heat exchanger from 200 kBTU/hour Viessmann boiler
In case someone finds this thread:
The culprit was indeed the check valve. The valve has a little round door
(about 1.5") that swings open when the flow is in the right direction, and
closes when there is no flow (by gravity) or when the flow is reversed.
The door has a rubber gasket for better seal. The hinge is none other than
a part of the gasket that sticks out at the top of the door and is attached
to the valve housing. My valve was old enough: the rubber had aged and
the hinge had broken. The door floated freely inside the valve and often
the flow would push it against the outlet, blocking it. (In which case
I doubt that tapping with a 2x4 would have made a difference).
I replaced the valve with an almost identical one, except that this one
is transparent (it cost just a few dollars more) so next time it breaks
it will be easier to diagnose the problem. Finding one that doesn't break
would be nicer, but it may not exist :-)
Thanks to everybody!
Luigi
30'x16' (irregular) indoor gunite/plaster pool, 10k gal,
Autopilot DLG-220 with SC-48 cell, 3/4 HP recirc pump,
solar panels, heat exchanger from 200 kBTU/hour Viessmann boiler
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