Air Leak
Detection
Air in the return jets, a pump that loses prime, or a system that runs rough — these are signs of a suction-side air leak. Air leak detection isolates where the suction system is drawing air instead of water, so the failure can be confirmed and repaired before it damages the equipment.
When the System Pulls Air Instead of Water
A suction-side air leak occurs when the plumbing that pulls water from the pool to the pump has a breach — and instead of drawing water through that breach, the pump draws air. The air enters the system, causes turbulence in the pump basket, creates visible bubbles in the return jets, and over time can cause the pump to lose prime and run dry.
Air leaks on the suction side are distinct from water leaks — the pool may not be losing measurable water, but the equipment is stressed and the system isn't functioning correctly. Left unaddressed, suction-side air leaks accelerate pump wear and can cause equipment failure.
Most suction-side air leaks we find are at connection points — the pump lid O-ring, unions, valves, or where the suction line connects to the skimmer or main drain. We confirm this through physical inspection — not assumptions.
With over 20,000 repairs completed across DFW, suction-side air leaks are one of the most commonly misdiagnosed equipment issues we encounter.
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Suction Side — From Pool to Pump
Suction-side air leaks occur anywhere along the line from the pool to the pump. The most common points are at fittings, seals, and equipment connections — not in the buried pipe itself.
Pump & Equipment Fittings
The pump lid O-ring, unions, valve seals, and equipment connections are the most common source of suction-side air leaks. These seals dry out, crack, or lose compression over time — allowing air to enter the system at the equipment pad rather than underground.
Skimmer & Suction Fittings
Where the suction line connects to the skimmer or main drain at the pool end is a common air entry point. A separated joint or deteriorated gasket at the skimmer throat can allow air to be drawn into the suction line — which appears as air in the return jets when the pump runs.
Underground Suction Line Failures
When a buried suction line has a breach, the pump draws air through the failure point rather than water — especially when the water table is low. These failures are confirmed by pressure testing the suction circuit and, when confirmed, located using acoustic detection before any excavation.
How It Works
Air leak diagnosis starts at the equipment pad and works back toward the pool — systematically eliminating each potential source.
Equipment Assessment
We inspect the full equipment pad — pump lid, O-rings, unions, valve seals, and all suction-side connections — under operating conditions. Air entry at the equipment level is the most common source and is the first to be ruled in or out.
Suction Circuit Isolation
We isolate each suction circuit — skimmer lines and main drain lines — to determine which circuit is introducing air. This narrows the failure to a specific line before any further diagnostic is needed.
Pressure Testing & Acoustic Detection
If the air source isn't at the equipment pad or visible fittings, we pressure test the suction circuit to confirm an underground breach. If a breach is confirmed, acoustic detection locates it precisely before any excavation is discussed.
Same-Day Written Report
Every finding is documented in the same-day written report — where the air entry was confirmed, what circuit was involved, and the recommended repair. You have the full picture before any work begins.
If something isn't right, we come back. That's not a policy — it's how we operate.



Written Warranties on Every Repair & Structural Component
Every repair following detection is backed in writing, with clear coverage and real accountability. Warranties are transferable to new homeowners at no additional cost.
Air Leak Detection — FAQ
Air bubbles in the returns almost always indicate a suction-side air leak — the pump is drawing air into the system through a breach somewhere on the suction side. The most common sources include a worn pump lid O-ring, a loose union or valve seal, a failed skimmer throat joint, or an underground suction line failure. We confirm the source through systematic isolation — not guesswork.
Not necessarily — and that's what makes suction-side air leaks easy to overlook. If the breach is above the waterline or at the equipment pad, the pump may draw air without water escaping from the pool. The pool level stays the same, but the system is running with air in it — stressing the pump and reducing filtration efficiency.
Yes. Running a pump with significant air in the system causes cavitation — the pump impeller is spinning without full water contact, which accelerates wear on the impeller and seal. Over time, this causes the pump to lose prime entirely and can result in seal failure and motor damage.
We start at the equipment pad — inspecting the pump lid, O-rings, unions, and valve seals under operating conditions. If the source isn't at the equipment level, we isolate each suction circuit and test for pressure loss. If underground, acoustic detection locates the breach before excavation. We confirm this through physical testing — not assumptions.
Equipment-level air leak diagnosis typically takes 30 to 45 minutes. If the source requires suction circuit pressure testing and acoustic detection, the full diagnostic may take 90 minutes to two hours. All findings are documented in the same-day written report.
Seeing Air in Your Return Jets?
Tell us what your system is doing, and we'll isolate the air source — equipment pad, fittings, or suction line — before recommending the right repair.
Last reviewed: April 2026