A blackout doesn’t just “pause” your pool. It removes circulation, filtration, and (often) automatic chlorination — which means sanitation can drift down while fine debris builds up. Use this checklist to keep the water safe during the outage and bring the system back online gently so you avoid priming problems, air locks, leaks, or tripped breakers when power returns.
What really gets worse when the pump stops
Your pool keeps consuming chlorine and accumulating micro-debris even with no circulation. In warm water and strong UV, or after heavy swimming, the gap can open quickly — and the first trouble spots are usually dead zones (steps, corners, benches).
(1) keep water sanitary, (2) avoid making clarity worse while stagnant, (3) restart safely so you don’t create a second problem.
Golden rules (avoid the common mistakes)
First restart should be supervised: confirm prime, stable returns, leaks, air behaviour, filter pressure trend, and chlorinator status.
If you can test, test first. If you can’t, dose conservatively and distribute properly. With no circulation, large guess doses can create local concentration zones and still miss the target.
Aggressive brushing/vacuuming without flow spreads fine debris and makes later clearing harder. Save heavy agitation for after circulation is restored.
After outages, schedules can drift or revert. Verify clock time, run windows, and chlorinator settings so you don’t accidentally under-filter or under-chlorinate.
0–30 minutes: quick checks (do these first)
The first half-hour is about removing easy bottlenecks and avoiding avoidable damage.
-
Water level
Confirm the pool is at a normal operating level (mid-skimmer is a common reference). Low water can pull air into the skimmer line and create air locks or loss of prime.
-
Skimmer baskets
Empty if visibly loaded with leaves/debris. Starting clean improves restart flow and reduces restriction.
-
Pump basket (if safely accessible)
If the basket is packed, priming becomes difficult and the motor can strain on restart. Clear debris now if it’s safe.
-
Condition check (sets urgency)
Heat/strong sun, heavy swimmers, wind/storm debris, or borderline water before the outage all raise urgency for sanitation steps (Part 2/3).
If you suspect an electrical fault, there’s flooding around equipment, breakers are tripping, or anything looks unsafe — do not attempt invasive checks. Move to “technician triggers” in Part 3/3.
Internal links for this protocol
These are the pages referenced in this checklist (keep the set consistent to avoid broken references).
2–6 hours: keep sanitation alive (manual actions that actually help)
In the first few hours, the biggest vulnerability is sanitizer drifting down while circulation is off. You’re not trying to “super-clean” the pool during a blackout — you’re trying to keep it sanitary and prevent corners/steps becoming the starting point for algae.
Conservative dosing is safer than a random “big shock.” With no circulation, large guess doses can create local concentration zones and still miss the target.
Hot, sunny, heavily used pools lose effective sanitation faster. Cool, covered, unused pools usually have more time — but still plan to verify FC and pH after restart.
A salt chlorinator only produces chlorine when the pump is running and flow is detected. During an outage, output is effectively zero. If the outage is long or conditions are high-demand, plan for manual sanitation support — then confirm normal SWG operation after power returns.
If FC won’t hold, pH keeps drifting, or clarity isn’t improving despite good flow, verified readings often save time and chemicals. Use professional testing to confirm the full set (FC/CC, pH, TA, CYA, CH, salt) and avoid chasing the wrong adjustment.
Use your internal link: “Professional water testing & balancing”.
24–48 hours: catch-up filtration cycles (restore clarity without stressing the system)
After circulation returns, a pool can look acceptable briefly, then haze appears as settled debris lifts back into suspension. The most reliable recovery is controlled catch-up filtration: establish stable flow, filter in blocks, and clean the filter when it loads — instead of running endlessly into high pressure or weak returns.
If prime is weak or returns are inconsistent, solve that before extending runtime.
If pressure rises quickly and returns weaken, the filter is loading — clean/backwash earlier than normal.
Confirm free chlorine is holding and pH is stable. Outages can leave a “hidden gap” even if water still looks clear.
Algae risk is highest when warm water meets low sanitizer in dead zones. Keep chlorine steady (avoid “crash → spike” cycles), brush only after circulation is restored (to remove early film from steps/corners), and keep baskets/pump lid seals clean so flow reaches the whole pool.
Restart checklist: safe equipment start (prime, air, leaks, timers, chlorinator)
The first restart after a blackout is where priming failures, air leaks, and timer/chlorinator issues show up. Treat it as a short inspection. If something looks wrong, stopping early is safer than “letting it run and hoping it clears.”
- Water level is correct
Skimmer can draw water without sucking air.
- Skimmer and pump baskets are clean
Clear restriction before restart to protect prime and flow.
- Valves are set intentionally
No closed suction/return lines; cleaner lines and multiport settings are correct.
- Prime is achieved and holds
Pump fills and returns strengthen within a reasonable time; it does not repeatedly lose prime.
- Air behaviour is normal
Basket is not constantly full of bubbles; returns are not “spitting” air persistently.
- No leaks at pressurised points
Check lid/O-ring, unions, filter clamp/multiport, and visible fittings after pressure returns.
- Pressure behaves normally
Avoid running into unusually high pressure; high PSI plus weak returns usually signals restriction or a loaded filter.
- Timer/automation clock is correct
Verify clock time, run windows, and variable-speed programs (if used).
- Chlorinator actually resumes
Confirm no error lights and that it is producing only when flow is present.
Avoid repeated stop-start cycles. Wait until power is stable, then do one supervised restart. Repeated starts are when pumps struggle to prime and breakers trip.
When you need a technician (stop and diagnose properly)
If any of the issues below occur, stop. Repeated restarts can damage seals, overheat motors, worsen air leaks, or create electrical risk.
Common causes: suction-side air leak, valve mis-set, blockage, lid/O-ring issue. Dry running damages seals.
Possible moisture ingress, capacitor/motor fault, wiring fault, or short. Do not keep resetting.
Blockage, closed valve, air lock, or heavily loaded filter. Running longer typically makes it worse.
Flow switch/cell/controller faults or settings reset. Needs proper diagnosis.
Stop immediately. This can indicate motor strain, seized bearings, electrical fault, or dry running.
Fix promptly to prevent air ingress and loss of prime (lid/O-ring, unions, filter clamp/multiport).
If you see water near electrical components, smell burning, or breakers continue to trip, shut the system down and arrange a qualified inspection.
FAQ
If the outage is short and conditions are low-demand (cool, covered, no swimmers), you may be able to wait. If it’s hot/sunny or the pool had heavy use, maintaining a safe residual is more important. If you dose while stagnant, keep it conservative and distribute around the perimeter; then circulate and test once power returns.
It will only produce chlorine when the pump is running and flow is detected. After an outage, verify that the pump schedule and chlorinator settings resumed correctly, then test FC. If FC dropped, a measured manual top-up may be needed while the system returns to normal production.
They can. After any blackout, verify the clock time, pump run windows, and any variable-speed programs. If your chlorinator percentage or schedule changed, sanitation may lag even though the pump runs.
Start with water level, skimmer/pump baskets, and valve positions. Then check filter pressure. High pressure with weak returns suggests a loaded filter. If the pump basket is full of bubbles, suspect air ingress (lid/O-ring, unions, suction-side leaks).
It depends on temperature, sunlight, bather load, and your starting chemistry. Cool, covered pools tolerate downtime better. The practical risk is FC dropping too low for conditions, allowing problems to start in dead zones even before the water looks visibly bad.
Not automatically. First confirm prime, flow, leaks, and pressure trend. Then filter in blocks and clean/backwash when the filter loads. Continuous running can be appropriate after heavy debris or significant haze, but it should be driven by clarity trend and filter loading, not as the default response.
A consistent weekly baseline (baskets, light brushing, sensible filtration, regular testing) prevents the slow drift that turns a blackout into a recovery project. If your pool is frequently affected by outages, baseline discipline matters more than “one-time fixes.”
