robbsclassics Posted February 19, 2013 Report Posted February 19, 2013 I have a 1989 Seven Seas hot tub. It's an LX-30 with 2 dual speed pumps. The circuit board was sent out to be tested and fixed and I have gotten it back. The problem now is that I don't have the pics I took of how all the wiring gets reattached. D'oh. Most of the connections are labeled, but not the main power and heater. I need to know what way the 6 240V connections get wired in on the bottom of board. I would greatly appreciate if someone could give a diagram, or even go out to their hot tub and snap a pic so I could see how the wires go. Quote
robbsclassics Posted February 20, 2013 Author Report Posted February 20, 2013 Ok, so got it hooked up and started to get it working. It seemed to be ok, but then overheated and there was no circulation. Before I could get to the breaker it tripped. After that I get an sn1 code. So I need to clear it, and replace it. How would I clear the code? I would like to at least see if I can bypass it to get some circulation to at least see if everything works. Thanks in advance. Quote
robbsclassics Posted February 20, 2013 Author Report Posted February 20, 2013 Ok, so got it hooked up and started to get it working. It seemed to be ok, but then overheated and there was no circulation. Before I could get to the breaker it tripped. After that I get an sn1 code. So I need to clear it, and replace it. How would I clear the code? I would like to at least see if I can bypass it to get some circulation to at least see if everything works. Thanks in advance. Quote
Dan.The.Spa.Man Posted February 20, 2013 Report Posted February 20, 2013 What do you mean by "got it going and it overheated"? Did any of the pumps run or did you just get the control pad to come on briefly before it overheated? The sn1 code is most likely caused by the circulation pump not running, so there is no way to "clear it" unless you get the pump to circulate. It comes on to protect the heater from dry firing due to no water flowing through it. Quote
Spa_Guru Posted February 26, 2013 Report Posted February 26, 2013 An SN1 code usually means you didn't have flow when the heater came on, and you may have damaged the sensor. You have other issues, post a photo of your board so we can identify it and give you a coherent answer. Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.