Call or text 303-736-9856
Call or text 303-736-9856
Polaris P61 Motor for PB4-60 Booster Pumps; 0.75 HP Used On: Polaris Booster Pumps PB4-60 after 2011 Polaris Booster Pumps PB4-60 before 2011
If your pool pump has started humming, leaking, or refusing to start, you likely need a pool pump motor replacement. We stock replacement motors from Century, Pentair, Hayward, and Nidec/U.S. Motors in the horsepower, frame, and shaft configurations that fit most residential and commercial pumps. Every order ships free, and most orders placed before 12 PM ET ship the same business day.
Picking the right motor comes down to matching what's already on your pump. Below, we break down how to identify your motor, when it's worth changing speed types, and what really moves the price.
A pool motor and pump are two separate parts that work together. The pump is the wet end (the housing, impeller, diffuser, and basket that move water). The motor is the dry end that drives the impeller using electricity.
When you replace a motor, you keep the existing pump housing and swap only the powerhead. That's possible because pump and motor brands follow standard frame sizes and shaft styles, so motors from one manufacturer often replace motors on pumps from another. A Century motor with the right frame size and shaft type, for example, can fit a Hayward Super Pump or a Pentair WhisperFlo wet end.
Compatibility depends on five things: horsepower, voltage, frame size, shaft type, and flange style. Get those right and your replacement motor will bolt up to your existing pump.
A motor rarely fails out of nowhere. The warning signs usually build up over weeks or months. Watch for:
Catch these early, and you can usually swap just the motor and keep the rest of the system. Ignore them, and the pump housing, plumbing, or heater downstream can take damage too.
Every pool pump motor falls into one of three speed categories. The right choice depends on your pool size, daily run time, and electricity rates.
Beyond speed type, confirm these specifications before ordering any pool pump motor: horsepower, voltage, frame size, shaft type, service factor, and whether the enclosure is open dripproof (ODP) or totally enclosed fan-cooled (TEFC).
A 2HP pool pump motor replacement is one of the most common swaps for in-ground residential pools, especially on Hayward Super Pump, Pentair WhisperFlo, and Sta-Rite Max-E-Pro setups. We stock 2HP motors in single-speed, two-speed, and variable-speed versions, in both full-rated and up-rated designations.
Horsepower is the simplest spec to match: read the label on your existing motor and order the same number. Bumping up in HP means your plumbing, filter, and heater all have to support the higher flow rate, otherwise you'll overpressure the system and shorten the life of every component downstream.
Common residential motor sizes we stock:
A quick note on labels: total horsepower (THP) is the more accurate number to match across brands, since it accounts for the service factor. Two motors labeled "1.5 HP" may pull very different amps if one has a 1.0 service factor and the other has 1.65.
The fastest way to find the right motor is to read the existing motor's label and copy the specs. You'll see most of what you need printed on the silver or white plate riveted to the motor housing.
Match these five specs to your old motor:
|
Spec |
What to look for |
|
Horsepower (HP / THP) |
Listed as HP with service factor (SF) right next to it |
|
Voltage |
115V, 230V, or dual-voltage 115/230V; commercial may run 208-230/460V |
|
Frame size |
48Y, 56J, 56Y, and 56C are the most common |
|
Shaft type |
Threaded shaft (most common for residential), keyed shaft, or smooth |
|
Flange style |
Square flange or C-face mounting |
Frame size matters more than people realize. A 48Y motor will not bolt up where a 56Y was mounted without an adapter. The Y designation indicates a NEMA pool-specific shaft; J indicates a longer shaft typically used on Hayward and other through-bolt designs; C-face mounts secure with bolts on a flat face instead of a flange.
If your label is corroded or unreadable, look up your pump model and check the OEM motor spec from the manufacturer. Or call or text us at 303-736-9856 with your pump model, and we'll match it for you.
Pool pump motor replacement cost varies based on a handful of factors. Before you budget, look at these:
Variable-speed motors carry a higher sticker price, but the energy savings often pay back the difference within one or two pool seasons, especially in regions with high electricity rates.
Replacing a pool pump motor is within reach for a confident DIYer who's comfortable around 230V wiring. The job involves shutting off power at the breaker, disconnecting the motor wiring, unbolting the motor from the wet end, transferring the impeller and seal plate, and reversing the process with the new motor.
One important note: our product pages state that professional installation (not included) is required for warranty validation. If you swap the motor yourself and a warranty claim comes up later, the manufacturer may decline coverage.
We recommend professional installation if any of these apply:
If you go the pro route, a local pool service tech or licensed electrician handles motor swaps regularly. Have the new motor shipped to you first so the installer isn't billing standby time.
Variable-speed motors cut electricity use by running longer at lower RPMs instead of in short bursts at full speed. Filtration math works in your favor: water turnover depends on total gallons moved, not how fast you move them. Slower flow also means quieter operation and less wear on bearings, seals, and the filter itself.
For a typical residential in-ground pool, switching from a single-speed to a variable-speed motor can significantly reduce pump-related electricity use, based on U.S. Department of Energy data. Actual savings depend on your pool size, daily run time, local electricity rates, and how aggressively you tune the schedule.
Variable-speed motors also tend to last longer. Lower RPM means less heat, less vibration, and less stress on the windings. Many homeowners replace a single-speed motor twice in the time a single variable-speed unit runs.
We carry pool pump motors from the brands that drive most residential and commercial pools in the U.S.:
Vita Pool Supply is an authorized dealer for Pentair and Hayward, so every motor ships with full manufacturer-backed warranty support. We also stock matching pumps, parts, and accessories if you'd rather replace the full unit..
The most common signs are a loud humming with no water flow, grinding or screeching from the bearings, frequent breaker trips, water leaking onto the motor housing, or a pump that won't start at all. A motor that's been running smoothly for years and suddenly turns noisy is usually telling you the bearings are gone.
Most pool pump motors last 8 to 10 years under normal use, though that range depends heavily on run hours, water chemistry, and how much rain or splash-out reaches the motor housing. Variable-speed motors often last longer because they run cooler and at lower RPMs.
Yes. The motor (the dry end) is designed to come off the wet end (the pump housing) as a separate part. If the housing, impeller, and diffuser are in good shape, swapping only the motor is the standard fix and costs far less than buying a complete pump.
The simplest answer is to match the horsepower, voltage, frame size, shaft type, and flange style on your existing motor's label. Going bigger in HP without upgrading your plumbing and filter usually creates more problems than it solves. If your label is unreadable, send us your pump model, and we'll match it.
Motor cost depends on horsepower, speed type, brand, frame size, and enclosure type. Variable-speed motors cost more upfront but typically pay back the difference through lower electricity bills. Professional installation adds labor on top of the motor price, with rates that vary by region.
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