By the way, we live the Dallas area, so it has been consistently hot,
but not hot enough for that kind of evaporation as we've never seen
this kind of spike before.
Okay, so I'm pretty confident that the pool autofill is where the
water is going. What I can't figure out is whether it is a broken
autofill or a leak somewhere. Judging by the water bill graph, this
started sometime in the last month or so. Where would those 15,000
gallons go and wouldn't I see signs of it in the way of sinkholes? If
it is autofilling and autodraining (we have one of those, too), I
would think that 480 gallons a day would be pretty evident in the lawn
where the overflow drain goes.
Any ideas on how to isolate it? I've left a few messages for pool
repair, but I probably won't talk to anyone until Monday.
Thanks.
> Any ideas on how to isolate it? I've left a few messages for pool
> repair, but I probably won't talk to anyone until Monday.
Turn off the autofill. Watch the pool water level for a few
days. If the pool level drops, then either the pool is leaking,
or it is evaporation. If the pool stays right up there, then
you know that the auto fill is broken or leaking. Once you
isolate it, then you can troubleshoot the specific system.
-john-
--
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John A. Weeks III 612-720-2854 jo...@johnweeks.com
Newave Communications http://www.johnweeks.com
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> If
> it is autofilling and autodraining (we have one of those, too), I
> would think that 480 gallons a day would be pretty evident in the lawn
> where the overflow drain goes.
I bet your autofill is set to just a *hair* higher than the autodrain.
--
Steve Bell
New Life Home Improvement
Arlington, TX