I had a look to se if I could find a craster pool pump and had no luck however the impeller on every pool pump I have ever seen is in the impeller housing which is bolted straight against the motor.
There is not one in the filter. It is inside the pump housing. Looks like a water wheel and is easily replaced by a handy person.
The impeller is inside the pump housing, attached to the motor shaft. Hatawa
An impeller is a rotating device that is used to force a fluid in a desired direction under pressure. A pool impeller is one of these devices, but in use in a pool.
Clean and empty in ground pool filter, clean and empty filter near pool pump. Be sure all whips are clear of dibris. also do a flush of the system. If this does not help, you will need to have a C02 charge done between the pool line and the pool pump. OR you may need to have your impeller replaced in the pool motor.
I had a look to se if I could find a craster pool pump and had no luck however the impeller on every pool pump I have ever seen is in the impeller housing which is bolted straight against the motor.
An aqaurium filter is a very basic machine. Electricity causes a magnetic impeller to spin. Take the aquarium out/off of the tank and take it apart. Plug it in. It should be absolutely silent. If it makes noise with all the parts removed, throw it away. Clean the impeller hole and be sure to seat the impeller properly when you reassemble the filter (this fixes 99% of most noisy filter problems). Noise from a filter is generally a piece of gravel/dirt caught near the impeller, but it can also be a loose impeller fitting or even fluctuating electrical current.
Looking at the impeller, counter clock wise
Its possible your pump impeller may be clogged. i advise to call a service professional to check this out.
well the motor will like it, it will run cool but the power bill will be high. it will not have the flow of a 2hp impeller
Check the psi on the filter tank? If its lower than usual there is something stuck in the lines or jammed in the pump impeller. If its higher than normal, it just needs to be cleaned. Also, if you put the multiport handle into the recirculate position, this will bypass the filter. If everything works better in recirculate then you have a filter problem
Leaves in the impeller of your pump.
The cleaning schedules varies from filter to filter, but a general guideline on any swimming pool filter is to take a reading when the filter is clean, then clean the pool filter when the pressure rises about 10 psi.
Is this pressure of water going in a filter or pressure of water coming out a filter? Do you mean increase the flow of water? An increase in the filter pressure alone without going to a larger size impeller or newer pump will only indicate that the filter is getting dirty. If you need more flow consider changing the impeller or even upgrading the pump BUT you have to know what the outcome of that change will be. You have to know what the hydraulics and pump curve is in order to keep from overpumping the water. Too much flow can be detremental to the plumbing, the pump, the heater. Going to a large size pump most likely now increase your flow if the pipes can not handle that extra flow of water. Sometimes whrn a pump is not sized properly - going to a smaller size pump or impeller - whichever the case may be - will increase the flow of water or GPM. There is a is a trick or formula for sizing pool pumps, filters and heaters to a particular pool.
THAT HAPPENENED TO US. WE HAD A SAND FILTER AND THE PRESSURE GAUGE NEVER MOVED. SAME THING HAPPENED THE FOLLOWING SEASON. WATER NEVR LOOKED QUITE CRYSTAL CLEAR EITHER. COME TO FIND OUT, WE HAD THE FILTER HOSES HOOKED UP WRONG. GO TO YOUR LOCAL POOL PLACE AND HAVE THEM DRAW YOU A DIAGRAM OF THE FILTER HOSE HOOK UP, THEN GO HOME AND CHECK IT WITH YOURS. THAT COULD BE THE PROBLEM This problem can happen when your pump impeller is clogged. Open pump and clean out debris from around the impeller.