So my husband has narrowed the issue down to the chlorinator. We disconnected the chlorinator, ran the pump and there was no charge, hook up the chlorinator again and it's back again. [emoji53]
NOT an expert, but I know a bit about electricity, and troubleshooting it. Just because you alleviated the issue by removing the SWG from the equation, does not mean there is anything wrong with the SWG. The SWG might just be a component of your system that is incompatible with whatever the real problem is. Just because the problem goes away in the absence of the SWG, does not mean that it won't resurface when some other variable is applied.
It might very well be the problem, but unless you know what you're doing, I'm recommending you don't trust your own troubleshooting skills to solve this.
Correct me if I'm wrong, someone, but the purpose of bonding (one of, anyway) is to safeguard people in the pool from anything going wrong electrically with any component of the pool system. So even if the SWG was wired incorrectly, or shorting, or malfunctioning in someway, you still shouldn't have felt that in the pool. Any errant electricity should be sent to ground, not into the water.
Even if you determine that the SWG or the way it's wired is to blame, I don't think that is the only problem. I think you still need a "sparky" to test your system, one that is an expert in pool wiring.
And just because a government agency doesn't require something, to make something safe, or safer, doesn't mean it isn't required, it just means not enough people have died from it yet.
Dun, dun, dunnnnnnnnnn...