Equipment
Leak Detection
Water loss at the equipment pad is a distinct diagnostic — separate from shell and underground plumbing failures. Pump seals, filter connections, heater fittings, and valve bodies can all be the source. We assess the full equipment pad to identify where the loss is occurring before recommending any replacement.
The Equipment Pad Is Part of the Diagnostic — Not an Afterthought
The equipment pad — pump, filter, heater, valves, and all the plumbing connecting them — is a significant source of pool water loss that gets overlooked when the diagnostic focuses only on the shell and underground lines. Seals fail, unions develop slow drips, filter heads crack, and heater connections deteriorate. Any of these can contribute to measurable water loss without being visible from poolside.
We assess the equipment pad as part of every full pool leak detection. Every connection, seal, valve, and fitting is inspected under operating pressure — because a slow drip at the equipment pad, multiplied by daily pump cycles, adds up faster than most homeowners expect.
Most equipment-side leaks we find are at connection points rather than within the equipment itself — which means they're repairable without full equipment replacement. We confirm this through physical inspection — not assumptions.
With over 20,000 repairs completed across DFW, equipment pad assessment is a standard part of every leak detection we perform.
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Pad to Pool — Every Connection Inspected
Equipment leaks occur at seals, fittings, and connection points — not typically within the equipment body itself. We assess each component individually to identify exactly which fitting or seal is failing.
Pump Seals & Filter Connections
The pump shaft seal, pump lid O-ring, and filter head connections are common failure points at the equipment pad. A failing pump seal allows water to weep from the back of the pump body — often pooling under the equipment and going unnoticed until it's caused significant loss.
Heater Fittings & Valve Bodies
Heater inlet and outlet connections, diverter valve bodies, and check valves all use plastic or rubber seals that deteriorate with heat and chemical exposure. These failures are often slow enough to go unnoticed — until the accumulated loss becomes measurable.
Union Fittings & Pad Plumbing
Union fittings are the connections between major equipment components — pump, filter, heater — and the plumbing lines. Union O-rings harden and crack over time, producing slow drips that become steady leaks. These are among the most repairable equipment-side failures we encounter.
How It Works
Equipment pad assessment is part of every full pool leak detection we perform — not a separate add-on.
Operating Condition Inspection
We inspect every component of the equipment pad while the system is running — pump, filter, heater, valves, and all connecting plumbing. Active leaks show themselves under operating pressure. We confirm the source through physical inspection — not assumptions.
Static Inspection
We also inspect with the system off — some slow seeps only appear under static pressure, others only under operating pressure. A complete equipment assessment includes both conditions so nothing is missed.
Documentation & Written Report
Every equipment-side finding is documented in the same-day written report — what was inspected, what was found, and the recommended repair for each failure point. You have the full picture before any work is approved.
Written Repair Estimate
Based on the confirmed failure points, you receive a clear written repair estimate — scope and cost — before any work begins. Equipment-side repairs are separate from underground or shell repairs and are estimated accordingly.
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.
Equipment Leak Detection — FAQ
The most reliable indicator is running the bucket test — comparing water loss with the equipment running versus off. If the pool loses significantly more water with the equipment running, the leak is likely on the pressure side, at the equipment, or in the return plumbing. If the loss rate is the same regardless of equipment, the leak is in the shell or at a surface fitting. We confirm through full diagnostic testing — not assumptions.
Not usually. Most equipment-side leaks are at seals, O-rings, unions, and fittings — all of which are repairable or replaceable without replacing the equipment itself. We assess what's actually failing before making any recommendation. We don't recommend equipment replacement unless the equipment body itself is cracked or structurally compromised.
Yes. The equipment pad is assessed as part of every full pool leak detection we perform. We don't skip the pad and focus only on the pool — a complete diagnostic covers every component of the system.
We repair equipment-side leaks — seal replacements, union O-ring replacement, fitting repairs. We replace equipment when the equipment itself has failed. We don't repair the equipment internally — motors, impellers, and internal components are outside our scope. If internal equipment repair is needed, we document the finding and provide a referral.
Noticing Water at the Equipment Pad?
Tell us what you're seeing, and we'll assess the full equipment pad — seals, unions, fittings, and connections — before recommending the right repair.
Last reviewed: April 2026