I've used a rubber mallet to hammer the ring. Heat gun didn't seem to work and it seemed like sand getting in between the ring and the body was the issue so hammering the body helped dislodge it.
@@wattsobx You can’t always get them apart. Giant wrenches and a heat gun might do the trick. The real trick is just throw it out, get a new one, lube the hell out of the threads, and loosen and tighten it OFTEN! So it can’t seize up.
Rubber Mallet and hammering on the ring in the direction to unscrew it. Heat gun, freezing, etc. didn't work for me, there was sand in between the threads locking it together so the hammer action loosened it up and forced the ring into the unscrewing direction.
As I said, you usually cannot get these apart once they have been in service for a while. Unless you have lubed them liberally before placing them in service. This one in the video was brand new. Occasionally you might succeed by using some very large Channelocks or the like. It's cheap enough to just get a new one and prep it as I showed.
Amazon Airlie Patent Pending G52 Backup Valve Replacement Kit for Polaris Pool Cleaners 180, 280, 380, 480, Designed in USA for Longer Valve Lifespan with Wear Resistant Technology, Compare to Zodiac G52 a.co/h1qz54d
This is the best video on the back up valve.
Thank you for being direct and clear. Do more videos about pool equipment if you can!
I've used a rubber mallet to hammer the ring. Heat gun didn't seem to work and it seemed like sand getting in between the ring and the body was the issue so hammering the body helped dislodge it.
This was my exact issue. Thanks for posting this.
Great video, surgical!
Great video!
Thanks for sharing this.
Peace and blessings!
Thank you! My husband always wants to blame other people when things fail!
Great info, you should me the direction of putting it on and off, Thank You.
Helpful! Thanks.
I bought a new one and it stays in backup mode.
how did you unscrew? Mine is on sooooo tight I cannot get the shell apart? ANy tips?
@@wattsobx You can’t always get them apart. Giant wrenches and a heat gun might do the trick. The real trick is just throw it out, get a new one, lube the hell out of the threads, and loosen and tighten it OFTEN! So it can’t seize up.
Rubber Mallet and hammering on the ring in the direction to unscrew it. Heat gun, freezing, etc. didn't work for me, there was sand in between the threads locking it together so the hammer action loosened it up and forced the ring into the unscrewing direction.
Thank you great advice. What tool did you use to unscrew top? I need to switch lids one cracked other inside bad.
As I said, you usually cannot get these apart once they have been in service for a while. Unless you have lubed them liberally before placing them in service. This one in the video was brand new. Occasionally you might succeed by using some very large Channelocks or the like. It's cheap enough to just get a new one and prep it as I showed.
I use a heat gun on the ring and it unscrews effortlessly
@@Mikeb-tx4cd Excellent!
Where did you buy the Airlie In-Line Back-Up Valve for the Polaris 360?
Amazon Airlie Patent Pending G52 Backup Valve Replacement Kit for Polaris Pool Cleaners 180, 280, 380, 480, Designed in USA for Longer Valve Lifespan with Wear Resistant Technology, Compare to Zodiac G52 a.co/h1qz54d
@@mguerramd thank you!
is there a wd-40 or silicone or teflon spray even worth trying if the gears start resisting or seizing up a little?
Oh why not. It’s fixing to fail anyway…