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The last 7 posts

Friday, April 6th 2012, 8:00am

by Wet_Boots

The spout under the diving board is already an air break, which is as good as it gets, and nothing else is needed, but the line between that spout and the potable water is looked at separately.

Thursday, April 5th 2012, 10:34pm

by Mitchgo

In my area- They are required.

And the fact that pools use chemicals a Reduced Pressure Back Flow Assembly is required because this is the highest form of protection

Thursday, April 5th 2012, 8:34am

by GatorGuy

Funny thing is I've seen pools with VERY small backflows. Don't know why.
Take a look around your pool pump and equipment.
If you had an inspection done on the house a licensed inspector would be required to tell you if you were missing one.

Enjoy the pool.

Thursday, April 5th 2012, 8:31am

by mnest (Guest)

re:

thanks! we just moved to an old, 15+ house with a pool so i was wondering if it was up to date and ready to go. we live in houston, so i'm guessing since backflow device is required, it's already got one.

Wednesday, April 4th 2012, 1:08pm

by GatorGuy

In our area (Houston Tx) backflows are required on all pools. I spot checked a couple of cities country wide and found they did also.

Some were very particular to type, some weren't. Need to call your local authorities.

Wednesday, April 4th 2012, 10:47am

by Wet_Boots

That depends on your location and the applicable codes. If there is a shutoff at the house that feeds an underground line to a typical spout under the diving board, an atmospheric vacuum breaker would work effectively, assuming there is no secondary shutoff at the spout itself.

Wednesday, April 4th 2012, 10:19am

by mnest (Guest)

backflow device for pool?

this may be a silly question, but do swimming pools need any sort of backflow device for their plumbing system?