Pentair WhisperFlo Motor Wiring and Voltage Issues
A WhisperFlo that won't start is usually an electrical problem — not a hydraulic one. The motor receives voltage, fails to turn, and either sits silently or produces a brief hum before the thermal overload trips. Diagnosing electrical failures requires a methodical approach: confirm power is arriving at the motor, confirm the motor components are intact, and confirm the wiring is correct for the voltage configuration.
⚠ Disconnect Power Before Servicing
Always disconnect power at the breaker before servicing the pump. Verify power is off with a voltage tester before touching any wiring.
Reading the Motor Nameplate
The motor nameplate label is affixed to the side of the motor housing. Before testing voltage, wiring, or ordering replacement parts, read the nameplate. The manual states: "Become familiar with the wiring diagram, volts, hertz, amps and phase of your particular pump motor. All of this information is provided on the motor nameplate label." If the supply voltage does not meet the requirements listed on the motor nameplate, permanent motor damage may occur.
| Nameplate Field | What It Tells You |
|---|---|
| Voltage (V) | Acceptable supply voltages — must match the supply before energizing |
| Amps (A or FLA) | Full load amperage at rated voltage — use for overcurrent protection sizing |
| Hz | 60 Hz for North American supply |
| Phase | Single-phase or 3-phase — 3-phase motors require external overload protection |
Voltage Selector Switch
The WhisperFlo motor has a voltage selector switch on the motor body (visible in the wiring illustration in the manual). This switch sets the motor for the correct operating voltage. Before wiring, confirm the switch is set to match the supply voltage. All other wiring information specific to the motor is found on the motor nameplate label.
Electrical Wiring Requirements (from Manual)
- Be sure all electrical breakers, switches, and automatic controls are turned off before wiring the motor
- Become familiar with the wiring diagram, volts, hertz, amps, and phase of your particular pump motor — all on the motor nameplate
- Be sure the supply voltage meets the requirements listed on the motor nameplate
- For wiring sizes and general guidelines, follow the National Electrical Code and all applicable national or local codes
- 3-phase motors require external overload protection. After installation, momentarily cycle power on then off — the motor shaft and/or fan rotation must match the rotation arrow on the pump
- Use a strain relief and be sure all electrical connections are clean and tight
- Cut the wires to the appropriate length so they do not overlap or touch when connected
Grounding (from Manual)
Permanently ground the motor using the green ground screw. Use the correct wire size and type specified by the National Electrical Code. Be sure the ground wire is connected to an electrical service ground.
The pump should be permanently connected to either a circuit breaker, 2-pole timer, or 2-pole relay. When the pump is started and stopped by removing power with a relay or timer, a two-pole device should be used to apply and remove power to both power line terminals.
If AC power is supplied by a GFCI circuit breaker, the pump should be wired on its own independent circuit unless it is operated in tandem with a Pentair salt chlorine generator.
Bonding (from Manual)
Bond the motor to the structure in accordance with the National Electrical Code and all other applicable national or local codes. Use a solid copper bonding conductor not smaller than 8 AWG. For Canadian installations, a 6 AWG or larger solid copper bonding conductor is required. Run a wire from the external bonding lug on the motor to all metal parts of the swimming pool, spa, or hot tub structure and to all electrical equipment, metal conduit, and metal piping within 5 feet (1.5 m) of the inside walls of the pool, spa, or hot tub.
GFCI Requirements (from Manual)
This pump must be connected only to a supply circuit protected by a ground-fault circuit-interrupter (GFCI). The GFCI should be tested on a routine basis:
- Push the test button — the GFCI should interrupt power
- Push the reset button — power should be restored
- If the GFCI fails to operate in this manner, it is defective
- If the GFCI interrupts power to the pump without the test button being pushed, a ground current is flowing — do not use the pump. Disconnect and have the problem corrected by a qualified service representative before using
Pentair offers GFCI breakers that meet 2008 to current NEC Standards for pool pumps.
Common Motor Failure Modes
| Symptom | Likely Cause | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Motor hums, shaft won't spin, overload trips | Failed capacitor or seized shaft | Test capacitor; try rotating shaft by hand (power off, wait 60 sec) |
| Motor silent, no attempt to start | No voltage reaching motor, tripped overload, open winding | Check breaker, supply voltage at motor terminals, overload reset |
| Motor runs but overheats frequently | Low voltage, dry run, blocked impeller, poor ventilation | Verify supply voltage meets nameplate; correct root cause before restarting |
| Motor runs but pump output is low | Clogged impeller, air leak in suction | See WhisperFlo Reduced Flow article |
| Motor vibrates excessively | Debris in volute, worn bearings | Inspect volute; test shaft for bearing play |
California Regulatory Note
The manual states: Pumps and replacement motors that are single speed and one (1) Total HP or greater cannot be sold, offered for sale, or installed in a residential pool for filtration use in California (Title 20 CCR sections 1601–1609).