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well its out of warranty by like 6 months but i agree since this started under warranty
I wish I could plug pump 2 into pump 1's slot to iron out if its the pump, but I don't think thatll work given the plumbing and differences in the pumps
Tripping issue - far fetched idea maybe....I got a tub from a friend that either lost interest in hot tubs or may get one for inside the home. They get a brutal cold wind at the outside tub area.Just after telling us he was gifting it, about a week later he called to say the tub was tripping his breaker. He felt he isolated this to the heater as he unhooked it and the tub pumps cycled and everything was as normal. I was weary of how it would all work out once I got the tub to my house because I knew dropping the 20 amp draw from a heater would likely keep it from tripping but not necessarily the root cause. Potential for need to do more troubleshooting but hey, I was still getting a free hot tub !! Add to that I'd be testing my own brand new 50 amp GFCI circuit with a tub known to have a fresh problem.- I followed his path and ordered a new heater (balboa 5.5 kw) and put in place. Now I was real concerned because the old heater and element appeared to look like new, ohms testing was within range and no apparent short at either element post. The tub fired up perfect and worked fine with pump/s, both speeds and new heater kicking on an off so I was very happy.Had a co-worker look at the orignial part too and he spotted a bit of rusty looking corrosion near one of the posts for the element connection. It apears to have had moisture there and since this is inside the "brain-box" , we are thinking the water leaked inside-out from the heater tube/element through the post connection. If this only happened once or intermittently, it would explain the issue and why it tests okay now. I was releived to find this out so I have trust in it's operation and feel that was indeed the problem. There is a nut at the base of the threaded post that is isolated from the heat tube body by a very slim margin. This corrison would have easily shorted there with some moisture that must have been there to cause the rust spot. Likely an age issue with a tub from 2005 but who's to say these fittings couldn't be leaking from new like a bad joint/gasket or seal? As mentioned, the other way to try things out is unhook one segment at a time like the ozonator or pump one or pump 2 or even the light circuit. Anything could get some moisture in proximity at times if not draw too much current momentarily.If that tub is tripping every few days, you might be able to find the pattern with tracking what has been isolated as this previous owner did with the heater. Most have a quick connect plug at the board.