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Hi there,Thanks for your reply!I think I have enough flow to the heater, but not sure how to tell for certain. It will heat fine to whatever temp I set and then only error put after that, so yea it could be not enough flow but would it just not heat at all then?How can I test if there's enough flow? It's a 1/15hp motor on the circ pump. I don't know the "official" way but my circ pump has bubbles that go across the tub from the the opening, you should feel some kind of flow.[/size]Yes I'm pretty sure te pressure switch is in correctly. It's just the simple screw in one that goes into the heater tube, plugs into the board, has an adjustable screw on top to change sensitivity. Before installing a new one I did try and adjust the sensitivity on the old with no success. I'm told they come factory calibrated so haven't adjusted the new one, I'm now pretty sure I didn't need to replace the pressure switch because I have experienced nothing differently after having the new one.I don't have a volt meter to test the switch like you've suggested. I can get one to test. What will it tell me, am I just looking for continuity? By pressure switch I am assuming it's a sail switch, so yes you're looking at continuity while you have flow. I was suggesting that if at the end of the heating cycle the flow stops a little, the switch opens for a moment due to something (pump slows for a bit) and the error appears. You would need a meter that can record high and low resistance. Just tonight I did try to jump the switch on the board (put the two pins together with a paperclip) and it didn't help. Instead a red LED came on in error on the PCB so I went back to just plugging it and it reset like usual. Interesting - I wonder if the switch has a resistor in it for the board to tell the difference between a short and flow. Of course the switch could open up when it senses flow and short when there's no flow.I'm tempted to try and configure a timer that would mimic my action of unplugging the pressure switch and replugging it in to avoid freezing and having to replace more, because that seems to work. Not sure how I'd do it yet but I'm still quite stumped by this.