If you've got an in-floor pool cleaning system running Vantage or Paramount pop-up heads, the single best upgrade you can make (if it isn't already there) is a multicyclone pre-filter. It's one of those bits of kit most pool owners haven't heard of, but once you understand what it's doing, you won't want to run an in-floor system without one.
What a multicyclone actually does
A multicyclone is a pre-filter that uses centrifugal separation to pull heavy debris out of the water before it reaches your main filter. Water enters the unit, gets spun at high velocity through a series of hydrocyclone chambers, and the denser particles, sand, grit, silt, fine dirt, leaf fragments, are thrown to the outer walls and dropped down into a collection chamber at the bottom. The lighter, cleaner water carries on through to the main filter and the rest of the system.
No media, no cartridges, no backwashing. It's purely mechanical separation. You empty the catch chamber periodically by opening a valve and flushing the sediment out. That's the entire maintenance cycle on the unit itself.
Why in-floor systems care about clean water more than most
Standard skimmer-and-return pools can tolerate a bit of suspended debris in the return water. In-floor cleaning systems can't, and here's why.
In-floor systems work by sending pressurised water through a buried manifold out to a network of pop-up heads set flush into the pool floor. Each head is a small precision device: a rotating nozzle that rises up when pressurised, fires a jet of water across a section of the floor, and retracts when the valve indexes to the next zone. Every pop-up head, whether it's a Paramount PCC2000 head, a Vantage head or similar, has tight internal tolerances around the nozzle orifice, the valve mechanism and the return spring.
If dirty water is being pushed through those heads, a few things happen. The nozzle orifices narrow, reducing jet velocity and cleaning performance. Grit gets into the valve barrel and causes heads to stick in the up or down position. Fine sediment wears the internal surfaces and shortens head life. And perhaps worst of all, debris ends up being redistributed through the heads back onto the pool floor instead of being captured and removed.
The whole point of an in-floor system is to sweep the floor clean. If the water driving the heads is full of the same fine debris you're trying to clear, the system is fighting itself.
Where the multicyclone fits in
A multicyclone is typically plumbed in after the pump and before the main filter. Everything the pump picks up through the skimmers and main drain passes through the cyclone first. Heavy debris drops out into the catch bowl, and the main filter, whether that's a cartridge, sand filter or media filter, only has to deal with the fine suspended particles that are left.
The flow-on benefits for an in-floor system are significant. Less grit makes it to the filter, so the filter stays cleaner for longer. Backwashing or cartridge cleaning intervals stretch out. The return water heading to the in-floor manifold is noticeably cleaner, which means the pop-up heads see less wear and keep firing properly for longer. In heavy debris pools, trees nearby, sandy environments, high bather load, the multicyclone can be the difference between a well-behaved in-floor system and one that's constantly clogging or misbehaving.
What to look for
Waterco's MultiCyclone range is the most common one we see in Australia and it comes in a few sizes depending on flow rate. Sizing matters. The cyclone needs to be matched to the flow the pump is producing; undersized and it chokes the system, oversized and the centrifugal separation isn't as effective. For most in-floor pools running a variable speed pump, we're sizing the cyclone to match the in-floor operating flow rate, not the peak pump capacity.
Installation matters too. The unit needs to sit upright, with the correct plumbing orientation for inlet and outlet, and enough clearance underneath to drain the catch bowl. It's not a complicated install, but it's one of those jobs where getting the orientation wrong at the start means poor performance or needing to redo it.
Ongoing maintenance
The catch bowl has to be drained regularly. Depending on your environment that might be weekly in a dirty pool, monthly in a clean one. It takes about ten seconds, open the purge valve, let the sediment flush out, close it. That's it. Miss it long enough and the bowl fills up, separation efficiency drops, and debris starts bypassing through to the filter.
Other than that, the unit is mostly self-sufficient. No moving parts, no consumables. If your in-floor system starts underperforming and you've got a cyclone on the line, checking whether the catch bowl is full should be one of the first things on the list.
The short version
A multicyclone pre-filter takes the heavy debris out of your water before it hits the main filter or the in-floor heads. For an in-floor system, that clean supply is what keeps your Vantage or Paramount heads firing at full performance, stops grit getting into the valve mechanisms, and stretches out the life of the whole system. If you've got an in-floor pool and no multicyclone on the line, it's worth a conversation about adding one.
Running an in-floor cleaning system in Sydney and not sure if you've got the right pre-filtration? We service Vantage and Paramount systems across Sydney and can assess what's installed and what it's missing. Get in touch.