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The Future of Pool Pump Technology: How Adaptive Flow Control Is Changing Pool Efficiency

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 The Future of Pool Pump Technology: How Adaptive Flow Control Is Changing Pool Efficiency For decades, pool owners and service professionals have relied on variable speed pumps to improve energy efficiency and reduce operating costs. While these pumps represented a significant advancement over traditional single-speed models, they still required users to estimate the correct operating speed based on pool size, plumbing configuration, and equipment demands. A new generation of technology is aiming to eliminate that guesswork altogether. The Nautis™ Variable Speed + Flow (VSF) Pump from H2flow Controls introduces adaptive flow control, a technology designed to automatically adjust pump performance based on real-time flow measurements. By continuously monitoring water flow and adapting motor speed as conditions change, the system seeks to deliver optimal circulation while maximizing energy savings. Moving Beyond Fixed-Speed Programming Traditional variable speed pumps are often progr...

Pool Service Safety Tips That Matter

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Pool service safety is not just a “be careful” reminder, it’s a set of repeatable habits that protect pool technicians, homeowners, and your business. On a pool route, risk shows up in obvious places and in surprising ones, especially when you are onboarding a new employee who did not choose the accounts. A smart safety culture starts with awareness, training, and the right protection, including thinking seriously about liability insurance. Even when you do everything right, accidents can happen in the field, and a single incident can turn into property damage, medical costs, missed work, and a lawsuit. The goal is to reduce exposure by spotting hazards early and building simple rules that are easy to follow every stop.   One of the most underestimated hazards for pool pros is backyard pets, including dogs that seem calm until the day they are not. A new dog can appear at a property with no warning, and a bite can be debilitating, disrupt a weekly service schedule, and trigger...

Employee Onboarding That Actually Works

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Training and onboarding a pool service employee is not a one-day task, because your route, your customer trust, and the long-term value of your pool business are on the line. A new pool technician will forget details, miss small steps, and run into situations they have never seen, even after weeks of ride-alongs. Planning for that reality is the first management skill: expect calls, expect small mistakes, and build a system that prevents problems from reaching the customer. For many pool service pros, three to four weeks of field training is a practical baseline, with clear standards for what “good service” looks like at every stop. Before you teach testing or brushing, you have to define culture, because culture sets the service level your employee will copy. Some companies run a numbers-first model where speed and volume win, while others protect premium customer service and spotless results. If you want consistency, say it out loud during onboarding and then back it up with training...

Phosphate Removers Explained Simply

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Phosphates are one of the biggest “hidden” drivers of recurring pool algae, even when the water looks balanced on paper. In pool water chemistry, phosphates are compounds made from phosphorus and oxygen, and they act as a primary nutrient for algae growth. That matters because algae doesn’t need much to take off: phosphate levels are measured in parts per billion, and small numbers can still keep blooms alive. Unlike chlorine, phosphates do not dissipate on their own. They do not evaporate with water, and they do not naturally break down in a way that reliably solves the problem. Over time, phosphates can build, and once algae appears you can get a nasty cycle where more algae activity leads to more measurable phosphate pressure and a faster slide into cloudy water and heavy chlorine demand. Understanding where phosphates come from helps you prevent the next outbreak. Fertilizer drifting in on the wind, landscape runoff, and organic debris like leaves can all contribute, but a major mo...

SKIMMER: Build A Pool Business You Can Sell

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Pool service owners often think they’re “just cleaning pools,” but a pool service business is a real asset with measurable value. A stable pool route with documented service history, reliable billing, and consistent customer communication can be bought, sold, or used as an exit plan when you no longer want to be on the pole every day. The big shift is mindset: you are not only a technician, you are building a company with transferable systems. When you treat the business like something another operator could step into, you reduce risk, increase profit, and raise the valuation buyers are willing to pay. That’s why pool service management software matters so much during a sale. In acquisition due diligence, buyers are effectively purchasing your people, your customers, and your data. Clean, exportable records show that each account is real, long-term, and properly serviced, rather than a loose list that can’t be verified. Data security also becomes part of the deal, especially when a buy...

SKIMMER AI Phone - Never Miss A Lead!

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Pool service businesses don’t usually lose work because they lack skill in the field. They lose work because the phone rings while the tech is knee-deep in a backyard, driving to the next stop, or trying to finish routes before sunset. That gap creates missed calls, missed estimates, and missed new pool service customers who simply move on to the next company. On the Pool Grey Podcast Show, the conversation centers on practical AI for pool businesses: using artificial intelligence to reduce real labor, protect focus, and keep revenue from slipping away. The key idea is simple: if AI doesn’t save time and eliminate busywork, it’s probably just hype. That lens leads to a concrete example: Skimmer’s AI Phone, an AI receptionist built for pool industry workflows. Instead of a generic answering service, it’s designed to handle pool-related questions, qualify leads, and capture the details that normally require a human to stop what they’re doing. The system can create a customer record autom...

Best Dirt Clean Up Methods For Your Pool

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Pool professionals regularly face pools overwhelmed with dirt, mud, algae debris, construction dust, and storm-related contamination. While standard filtration systems handle routine maintenance well, heavy dirt loads often require more advanced cleanup methods. Over time, pool cleaning has evolved from basic hose vacuuming into specialized systems designed to handle extreme debris more efficiently, reduce filter strain, and speed up cleanup time. Traditional Hose and System Vacuuming The original and most common method uses a manual vacuum head, hose, and the pool’s filtration system. Debris is pulled through the skimmer or suction line and captured by the pool filter while clean water returns. This method works best for light dirt, routine maintenance, and small debris loads. It is simple, low cost, and widely used in residential service. However, it struggles with heavy contamination such as mud, fine silt, construction dust, and post-storm debris. Because everything passes through ...