Equipment Repair
Salt System Repair
Salt systems can stop producing chlorine because of scale buildup, bad cells, flow issues, control faults, or wiring problems. The service visit is what tells us whether the issue is a clean-and-correctable problem, a component failure, or a replacement-level situation.
Salt-system diagnostics
Cell, flow, and control issues
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Quick Summary
What We Need To Confirm
Whether The Cell Is Actually Producing
Some systems show warnings because of the cell, while others are failing elsewhere in the system.
Whether Flow And Salt Readings Are Real
Flow switches, scaling, and sensor issues can produce misleading symptoms.
Whether The Unit Is Worth Repairing
Some problems are small repairs. Others mean the cell or controller has reached the end of the line.
Cell And Scale Issues
Calcium buildup on the cell
Low chlorine output
Cell cleaning or end-of-life concerns
Check-cell warnings
Flow And Sensor Issues
No-flow or flow-error warnings
Bad or inconsistent salt readings
Flow-switch problems
Circulation-related shutdowns
Control And Electrical Issues
Controller or display faults
Bad wiring or corroded connections
Intermittent operation
System stops producing with no obvious water issue
What We Need To Determine At The Visit
Whether the problem is the cell, flow switch, controller, wiring, or the surrounding circulation setup
Whether the cell still has usable life left or is already at replacement stage
Whether the displayed salt and flow information is accurate or being skewed by a fault
Whether the system still makes sense to repair instead of replace
Repair Or Replacement?
Scale and flow-related issues can sometimes be corrected without a full replacement.
Cells eventually age out, and sometimes the repair path is no longer worth chasing.
Controller and electrical faults can be repairable, but the overall age and condition of the system still matter.
The service visit is where we separate a maintenance issue from a true component failure.