Map the valve scenes before adjusting spillover timing or chemistry.
- ✕Do not assume constant spillover is a neutral default
- ✕Do not use the pool's stable numbers as a proxy for the spa when spa is hot or spilling over
pH / Total Alkalinity / Free Chlorine
Spa Spillover Advanced
Use spillover intentionally instead of treating it as a default setting, because attached spas change pH rise, heat loss, aeration, and sanitizer demand.
Map the valve scenes first
You need the pool, spa, and spillover paths labeled before you can reason about the chemistry.
Decide whether spillover should be constant or timed
Spillover is a feature, not a requirement.
Manage the chemistry consequences
Hotter, more aerated water changes the numbers faster than a quiet pool does.
Treat heat retention and splash-out as part of the control choice
Spillover changes energy use and water loss, not just appearance.
Escalate when the spillover is hiding a real equipment problem
A bad scene can look like a chemistry issue if the valve path is wrong.
Resources (5)
Shared pool/spa systems and spillover logic
Use the base spa-combo guide for valve modes, heater interactions, and shared-system troubleshooting.
Water features and aeration
Use the aeration guide when spillover behavior is really a pH-rise and splash-out problem.
Heater operations
Use the heater guide when spillover depends on heat retention or shared heater logic.
Mixed-brand control mapping
Use the control map when the spa scene depends on more than one controller or automation family.
Pool covers
Use the cover guide when the spillover question is really about heat retention and water loss.
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.