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The Most Common Swimming Pool Heater Problems

Installing and troubleshooting a heater that is still under warranty without proper licensing can forfeit your warranty under the manufacturer’s terms and conditions. If your heater is out of warranty, sometimes, it’s simply cheaper to do it yourself. If you yourself in this scenario, this blog article is for you. In this blog article, we cover the most common swimming pool heater problems a pool owner might encounter and remedies to fix the issue.

My Heater Won’t Ignite

One of the most common problems with pool heaters is it failing to ignite.

Is your heater turned ON and the temperature set correctly?

  • Ensure that the thermostat is set to a higher temperature than the current water temperature.

Is your pump running with a clean filter and basket?

  • Inspect the pump and filter and clean if necessary.

Make sure that the pilot is lit (millivolt heaters).

  • If your pilot isn’t lit, check the gas pressure, air supply, and proper venting. Make sure the pilot tube is intact and not clogged. For MV heaters, if the pilot won’t stay lit, check the output on the thermocouple.

Is the gas supply valve in the ON position?

  • Without gas, the heater won’t operate. If the supply valve is OFF, turn it ON.

Are the plumbing and filter valves open?

  • Make sure to keep your valves open as to not prevent the water flow.

Low Water Flow

In order for a heater to operate smoothly and efficiently, it’s important that pool system maintains a consistent flow of water. Manufacturers equip swimming pool heaters with pressure sensors. These special sensors monitor and detect changes in water flow. For example, in some cases, you will see a “Low Water Flow” warning pop up on your heater’s LCD screen. Or, you might notice your heater isn’t pushing out as much warm water as it should or used to. Honestly, this is a very common occurrence. If you are experiencing low water flow, or your heater won’t start, ask yourself the following questions:

Have you cleaned your filter lately?

  • Monitor your PSI reading on your filter’s pressure gauge. If the PSI is too high, clean your filter.
  • Increasing pressure goes hand in hand with the decrease of water flow.

Is your pump basket dirty?

  • Check your pump’s strainer basket. Remove the basket and remove the debris with a hose.
  • Ensure the pump basket and lid are in good conditions. No cracks.

Do you have too many water features operating at once?

  • Your pool pump only moves a certain number of GPMs, therefore, too many water features can dramatically decrease your water flow.
  • If possible, replace the motor with a larger one.
  • Close water features, or alternate them, until the pool heats to the desired temperature.

Defective Pressure Sensor/switch (Most Common)

  • The purpose of the pressure switch is to ensure that water is flowing through the unit before it allows the heater to turn on.
  • The pool pump must be ON and your filter clean for the switch to close and allow voltage to pass through.
  • Test the voltage reading on the pressure switch with a multimeter.
  • Replace the pressure switch if necessary

Are you using the low settings on your variable speed pump?

  • For operation, heaters require a minimum GPM flow. If you are running your variable speed pump on the low setting, make sure you meet the minimum GPMs for your heater.

Pool Heater Turns ON and OFF (Cycles)

If your swimming pool heater is cycling ON and OFF, it is an early indication that the electrical connection or power supply is experiencing issues. However, it isn’t ALWAYS the case. There are other factors that can actively contribute to your heater’s ON and OFF cycles.

Is your pool water chemistry consistently and accurately balanced?

  • Poor water chemistry is one of the leading causes of equipment failure, especially pool heaters.
  • Test your water before adjusting your chemical levels. If unsure, please refer to the heater’s manual for the recommended chemical levels.

Have you inspected the pressure sensor, thermal regulator, and/or the high limit switch?

  • Inspect these parts for corrosion, scaling, and/or any electrolysis issues.
  • If the pressure sensor, thermal regulator, or high limit switch is faulty, corroded, or defective- replace it.

Have you cleaned your filter?

  • A dirty filter can cause low pressure and as a result, cause the heater’s pressure switch to turn OFF. A dirty filter can prevent a heater from firing and it can also cause your heater to shut off before warming the water to the desired temperature.

When’s the last time you have inspected and cleaned the heat exchanger?

  • Deterioration of the heat exchanger can impact your heater’s operation. Inspect your heat exchanger for chemical or sanitizer damage.

Pool Heater Isn’t Heating

Sometimes, your pool heater ignites but doesn’t reach the desired temperature. Or, maybe your heater isn’t generating heat at all. Both situations are very common.

Inspect your temperature sensor.

  • Make sure you have installed the temperature sensor correctly and it is in good condition.

Double check your thermostat settings

  • Set your thermostat to a higher temperature.

Did you properly size your pool heater?

  • If your heater is undersized, it will have problems heating your pool up. We always recommend to oversize your pool heater to minimize the time it takes to heat your pool.

author avatar
Charlie Ramirez
Writer at InyoPools.com, brings a wealth of knowledge and expertise in pool care and equipment, helping pool owners make informed decisions for over a decade.

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209 responses to “The Most Common Swimming Pool Heater Problems”

  1. Josee Avatar

    My heater (pentair )is reading 94-96 degrees ( did read 104 earlier this afternoon but came down to 94 when I turned unit off then back on again) but is set at 80. To touch it is obviously not at 94. When I raised the temps to 95 the heater did click on. Can u tell me what the problem is.

  2.  Avatar

    Just had my heater begin starting and stopping. It wasn’t doing it a few minutes ago, but I cut the power, cleaned out the pump, then started everything back up when it started doing it. It got a little splashed from the filter being open when I cut the pump back on. Any thoughts on what could be going on? Did the water from the filter possibly cause a short of some kind?

    1. Matthew Simmons Avatar

      What is the make-model of the heater? The heater model number would work to.

  3. Beth Paver Avatar

    Hello
    My Sta Rite SN0004NA heater turns on, fires up, heats water for 3 minutes and turns off. Then in 10 minutes it does it again.
    The filters are clean
    The pump basket is clean
    good water flow,
    had gas checked – that is fine.
    Any ideas?

    1.  Avatar

      Hi Beth, you may want to check your pressure switch.

  4. Chris T Avatar

    Hi Matt, any advice on my question from June 4 about the Jandy Lite 2 (Model #: LG175N)?

    Any advice greatly appreciated!

    Chris

  5. Christopher Avatar

    Matt- I bought a house with a smaller in-ground pool (approx 15′ x 30′, 3.5′ shallow, 5′ deep) that has a gas powered Raypak P-R206A-EN-C. Heater is 9 years old, worked great last summer- would heat the pool to temp in an hour or so, with very warm- almost hot- water pumped into the pool. This summer the heater fires up fine, plenty of heat coming from the unit, but water pumping in is luke-warm, and takes hours to get to 85, where it peaks out. The pool service company I inherited looked at it (unannounced while no one was home) and said the heater “couldn’t be working better” and that if I wanted more heat, they could install a bigger heater. This does not sound right… thoughts?

    1. Matthew Simmons Avatar

      A lot depends on what region in which the heater is located, as to the heat rise per hour. In the Midwest this year- without a cover- it has been difficult to achieve a decent heat rise- until a couple of days ago.

      Pool heaters do not modulate, they are either on or off- delivering a blended delta T of about 6- 8 degrees (inlet pipe to outlet pipe) no matter the pool or air temperature. I’m guessing that the service company confirmed that the heater was not shutting off intermittently and was running at a proper delta T. If so, then the heater is doing what it can do, though the water may feel different coming from the return- depending on the pool temp. A solar cover would help with heat loss, but that model heater is very capable of recovering heat loss in that size pool. Hope this helps.

  6. Dustin Avatar

    Have a Hayward HeatPro HP21404T that is 4 years old. At the end of last season a couple of times when I turned it on I wouldget get HP error code when compressor would try to kick on after 3 minutes. It would reset then after 3 minutes it worked as normal. This year when I tried using it for the first time the breaker would trip every time the compressor would try to kick on. After HVAC tech authorized by Hayward opened it up he couldn’t find the problem but it went back to the HP error and then reset then it would work fine. Yesterday when I went to turn it off the display was not showing the temperature but was showing it was in pool mode and heating. Flow rate is 48 gpm through it. Is this a control board issue?

    1. Matthew Simmons Avatar

      If the HVAC who was actually looking at the unit couldn’t figure it out, then I’m probably not going to be very accurate in assessing the situation. Best guess would be a bad pressure sensor or a dirty filter. But the below is the manual explanation o the code:

      HP & HP3 – Low water flow to the unit or faulty high-pressure control. Check water flow. Backwash filter and/or heater. The unit will show HP3 after
      3 HP faults. This will stop your heater for protection.

      1. Dustin Avatar

        On the pressure sensor is the water in the tube supposed to go all the way to the switch? Mine stops short about 6 inches from reaching it.

  7. Martin Avatar

    Have new Pentair Ultra temp 140.
    Keeps throwing the breaker at the Pentair panel after 1 hour of operation. Any thoughts as to why?

    1. Matthew Simmons Avatar

      If it is not flashing any error codes then I would say there is an issue with the circuit.

  8. Rich... Avatar

    I have a have a question on the Hayward h150fdp pool heater. Will heater go into standby mode when pump shuts down from timer?

    1. Matthew Simmons Avatar

      Yes, it should shut off once the heater senses the drop in water flow.

  9. Darryl Avatar

    Hi,

    I have a Sta-Rite Sr400HD gas pool heater that is about 8 years old. It worked fine last season. This season it won’t fire up at all. I turn on the heater, green light is on pool and water temp says 73. there are no red lights. I raise the temp and the service system red light comes on. I took off the shell and vacuumed out all the debris. Took out my cartridge filters and cleaned them. Baskets are empty. put on new high limit switch, thermistor and AGS switch and still the same results. Any suggestions? Could it be the water pressure switch? I don’t have a voltmeter.

    Thanks

  10. EP Avatar

    Heater Raypak P-R266A-EN-C, 266,000 BTU/HR, 10,000 GA in-ground pool. There is motorized vinyl pool cover. Heats up about 2 – 2.5 F / hr. Currently it’s 65F outside. The pool is now 77F. Is it normal heating speed? Any way to improve it by maintenance or adjusment? It ignites fine, no error codes.

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