Your pool’s pressure gauge can save you hours of guesswork, or it can trick you into cleaning the wrong thing at the wrong time. We walk through what pool filter PSI (pounds per square inch) actually means, why higher pressure usually equals more restriction and less circulation, and how that loss of flow shows up in real life: cloudier water, weak returns, a spa spillway that barely spills, and cleaners that stop moving like they should. We also get specific about filter types. DE filters a...

Show Notes

Your pool’s pressure gauge can save you hours of guesswork, or it can trick you into cleaning the wrong thing at the wrong time. We walk through what pool filter PSI (pounds per square inch) actually means, why higher pressure usually equals more restriction and less circulation, and how that loss of flow shows up in real life: cloudier water, weak returns, a spa spillway that barely spills, and cleaners that stop moving like they should.

We also get specific about filter types. DE filters and sand filters often follow the classic rule of thumb where about a 10 PSI rise over clean pressure signals it’s time to backwash (and for DE, recharge). Cartridge filters are a different story. Small single-cartridge systems may show a clear PSI climb as they clog, but large quad cartridge filters can run for months with almost no gauge movement, so you need to pair the pressure reading with water quality, flow clues, and a consistent filter cleaning schedule.

Variable speed pumps change the whole PSI game because pressure depends on RPM. If the system is running low speed when you check it, the gauge may look “normal” even when the filter is loaded. We share the simplest way to get a meaningful reading: run the pump at full speed briefly and compare that number to your recorded clean PSI. Finally, we cover red-flag readings like near-zero PSI (broken gauge, low water, air, impeller issues) and sudden very high PSI (possible return-side blockage) so you know when it’s more than routine pool maintenance.

• defining PSI and why higher pressure usually means lower flow
• finding and tracking each pool’s clean filter pressure baseline
• spotting flow loss through spillways, water features, and cleaners
• knowing when DE and sand filters need backwashing
• understanding why large quad cartridge PSI often barely changes
• using full-speed readings to evaluate filters on variable speed pumps
• diagnosing near-zero PSI from dry running, air leaks, or impeller clogs
• treating sudden high PSI as a possible return-side blockage

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