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Equipment details and reference
Repair literacy

Read the pad before anyone cuts pipe

Use the fitting shape and the remaining room at the pad to decide whether the next move is a clean repair or a larger replumb.

Socket / hub / spigot

A socket receives the pipe, a hub is the fitting opening, and a spigot is the pipe end that slips in.

Socket saver / reamer

Use when a glued socket is damaged but the fitting wall is still worth saving.

Over-hub repair

Glue outside the fitting when the pipe is gone and the hub can still be preserved.

Split nut / union repair

A cracked union nut may be replaceable before the whole line gets cut back.

Check-valve direction

The arrow follows the water path. Wrong direction makes the pad lie to you.

Bypass path

Mark where water can skip the heater, feeder, or solar loop before anyone opens the saw.

Don't cut yet

Open pad labeling first when the next repair depends on fitting shape, valve direction, or how much pipe is left.

Open Equipment Pad Labeling

Equipment & Supplies

Keep the details you need for manuals, service calls, warranty, and safe storage.

Best when
  • Keep the details you need for manuals, service calls, warranty, and safe storage.
Check before you start
  • Pool type, surface, volume
  • Equipment model and serial numbers
Stop if
  • Do not open electrical panels or gas-train assemblies unless you are qualified to do that work safely.
Start here

Photograph labels and plumbing, save manuals and receipts, then record serial numbers, install dates, clean pressure, and normal valve positions.

Skip this
  • Leave electrical panels and gas-train assemblies closed unless you are qualified
  • Photograph nameplates before searching manuals; exact model spelling matters
  • Check whether a split nut, socket saver, inside connector, or over-fitting repair can save an expensive glued fitting before anyone cuts pipe
  • Ask sellers, builders, or service companies for documents instead of relying on verbal summaries
Check these first

Pool type, surface, volume / Equipment model and serial numbers

1

Capture the installed equipment

Start with the fields that shape service, warranty, and replacement decisions.

2

Build the owner file

Keep durable records attached to the pool before they scatter.

3

Keep warranties and service logs together

Warranties only help if the model, install date, startup history, and service trail are easy to prove.

4

Photograph and label the whole system

Start with a permanent record before anything is taken apart.

5

Record repair leverage before anything breaks

Some of the most valuable inventory notes are the ones that keep a small repair from becoming demolition.

6

Identify the core equipment families

Capture the pump, filter, sanitizer system, and any heater or automation controller.

7

Create the reference sheet you will actually use

A usable equipment record prevents panic troubleshooting later.

8

Add safety checkpoints while you are there

Inventory work is the right time to catch hazards that get ignored for years.

Warnings
  • Do not open electrical panels or gas-train assemblies unless you are qualified to do that work safely.

Educational guidance only. Verify labels, manuals, local code, and site conditions before acting. Stop for electrical, gas, structural, drain, drowning, injury, emergency, or chemical-mixing risk.

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