Pressure doesn’t look dangerous—until the instant it is. We take you right to the two moments that matter most in filter service—when the lid comes off and when it goes back on—and show you how to turn a risky task into a safe, repeatable routine. We start by reframing the filter as a pressure vessel, not a harmless canister. Sand filters are usually one-piece and lower risk; cartridge and DE filters come apart, rely on clamps or locking rings, and can fail if misaligned or under-tightened. ...

Show Notes

Pressure doesn’t look dangerous—until the instant it is. We take you right to the two moments that matter most in filter service—when the lid comes off and when it goes back on—and show you how to turn a risky task into a safe, repeatable routine.

We start by reframing the filter as a pressure vessel, not a harmless canister. Sand filters are usually one-piece and lower risk; cartridge and DE filters come apart, rely on clamps or locking rings, and can fail if misaligned or under-tightened. You’ll hear why modern safety designs like the Aquastar Pipeline’s interlock are so effective and how to apply the same logic on any system: power down, bleed air, drain, and verify zero pressure before loosening hardware.

From there, we share practical safeguards that work in the field. Put automation in service mode, move Intermatic trippers, or cut the subpanel, but don’t stop there—remove the pump lid so the system can’t prime even if a glitch starts the motor. We talk through clamps in detail: reading spring-barrel nuts, preventing cross-threading with a touch of lube, knowing when a clamp is cosmetic-ugly yet structurally sound, and when to replace hardware for peace of mind. On restart, we step back, open the air relief, and wait for water before approaching. A spiking gauge is your red flag for a blocked return or a clogged salt cell; shut down fast, clear the path, and protect the tank.

• treating the filter as a pressure hazard
• relative risks of sand, cartridge, and DE filters
• turning off power and automation service mode
• removing the pump lid as a fail-safe
• bleeding air and safe startup distance
• clamp types, tightening until spring coils meet
• avoiding cross-threading and when to replace clamps
• spotting dangerous pressure spikes and return blockages
• quick priming tips and avoiding automation glitches
• training techs to follow a standard safety checklist

Learn more at swimmingpoollearning.com  
On the banner, there’s a podcast icon—click for the archive  
Learn more at PoolGuyCoachin

Send us a text

Support the Pool Guy Podcast Show Sponsors! 

HASA 
https://bit.ly/HASA

The Bottom Feeder. Save $100 with Code: DVB100
https://store.thebottomfeeder.com/

Try Skimmer FREE for 30 days:
https://getskimmer.com/poolguy 

Get UPA Liability Insurance $64 a month! https://forms.gle/F9YoTWNQ8WnvT4QBA

Pool Guy Coaching: https://bit.ly/40wFE6y





Support the show

Thanks for listening, and I hope you find the Podcast helpful! For other free resources to further help you:
Visit my Website: https://www.swimmingpoollearning.com
Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@SPL
Podcast Site: https://the-pool-guy-podcast-show.onpodium.com/

UPA General Liability Insurance Application: https://forms.gle/F9YoTWNQ8WnvT4QBA

Pool Guy Coaching Group

Join an exclusive network of Pool Service Technicians to access the industry’s leading commercial general liability insurance program. Protect your business.

Premium is $64 per month per member (additional $40 for employees and ICs)

$59 per month for Pool Guy coaching Members - join here! https://www.patreon.com/poolguycoaching

Limits are $1,000,000 in occurrence and $2,000,000 in the aggregate - Per member limits

[ $1,000,000 per occurrence and $4,000,000 aggregate available for $75 per month ]

$50,000 in HazMat Coverage - clean up on-site or over-the-road

Acid Wash Coverage - Full Limits