Sure—Anyone Can DIY a Pool Pump. That’s the Problem.
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Every pool pad has that rusty metal time clock hanging near the pump—sometimes “weatherproofed” with an upside-down ice cream bucket. That little box is the birthplace of more bad advice than almost anything else in the pool industry, because it trained homeowners to chase “minimum hours” instead of water quality and system safety.
In this episode, Jason Davies (CPC1460695) explains why pump runtime advice is often superstition, how modern efficiency standards changed the equipment market, and why a pump swap isn’t a casual handyman job—especially on the suction side.
You’ll learn the real difference between Variable Speed (VS) and Variable Speed & Flow (VSF) pumps, why “slower and longer” can outperform “fast and short,” and how suction outlet safety ties directly into responsible pump selection and installation.
Key topics:
- Why time clocks created bad pump-runtime habits
- Variable Speed vs Variable Speed & Flow (gas pedal vs cruise control)
- Why filtration + mixing matter as much as sanitizer
- Florida residential code anchors referencing suction/pressure velocity and entrapment protection standards
- Why “worst-case full speed” matters even if you plan to run low RPM
- Remodel touchpoints: replaster, liner replacement, drain covers, and why safety components aren’t “trim”
Disclaimer: This episode is general education and not legal advice. Codes and enforcement vary by jurisdiction. Always follow manufacturer instructions and local requirements.