The 25 year old control system on my '95 Hot Spring Grandee has finally failed. The PWA Interlock timer board appears to have died. Being so old it's NLA (of course) and 100% pure fresh-squeezed unobtainium. 
I had a used late 1990s IQ2000 control system as a backup for that eventuality. I got it in a package deal where I bought all the guts from a different dual jet pump Watkins (Tiger River) tub that a guy scrapped because it got frozen. I swapped that system in only to find out that there is an issue with the control panel circuit board. It doesn't communicate with or read the signal it's getting from the temp control thermostat and as a result the green Ready light starts flashing about 5 seconds after the tub is powered up and the system is shut out for calling for heat. I've checked and double checked the heat sensor and it's good so the problem has to be in the control head/panel (this is according to Watkins' tech support).
So that control system is pooched as well. For the time being, I've hot wired the heater and am manually keeping the water warm by turning the 30A GFCI in the hot tub's GFCI panel on and off. I can limp along that way for quite awhile while I figure out what my next move is going to be. I can't find another used IQ2000 or IQ2020 system that I can buy right now and I absolutely cannot afford to buy a new IQ2020 system from Watkins or anyone else. Besides that, I'm hesitant to buy a new control system that I know Watkins is going to make obsolete and discontinue supplying parts for in a few years like they've done with every one of their previous control systems.
I've done some research and I think I'm going to try and build a new control system using off-shelf-stuff but try to do it in a way that still has the same safety systems that my original control system had. Below is the architecture for my original system. I plan to base my new system design on that system but replace the Heater Control and High/low temp limit functions with the SmartPID M5 Pro which you can see on this page (scroll down a little ways) and this page. You can also check out this video on it. It's quite the little gadget!
The nice thing about this system (if I can build it), is that I'll be able to control my hot tub temperature and check the status of its temperature control system on my phone and the system will send me alerts through the cloud if an alarm condition occurs. If I replace the mechanical on/off relays in the heater circuit with SSRs I'll also be able to run the heater in PID mode which may save some energy and keep the water temperature more stable.
To protect the heater from no flow condition, I plan to run the ground wire for the heater relay control signal circuit through the flow switch (like it was before) so the heater can't be turned on if the flow switch isn't detecting any flow in the circ pump/heater line.
The SmartPID M5 Pro model is dual channel and can read off dual sensors so I plan to use Channel 2 to also monitor water temperature with a second sensor but this time be in On/Off mode if the water exceeds 115 F or drops below say, 45F or whatever. I was thinking Channel 2 will deliver the control signal for the circ pump, jet pumps and ozonator relays when the H2O temperature is between the two limits so those components will be able to get power under that condition but they won't be able to get power when either temp limit is reached. When the circ pump is shut off, the flow switch opens up and that will shut down the heater and/or prevent it from being turned on. That kind of duplicates most of the original safety systems I think.
If anybody is interested and can lend a hand with ideas and suggestions for how to design this DIY control system around this SmartPID and make it safe as possible, please feel free to come forward and make suggestions in this thread. I only have a rough idea as to how I'll design the system and given that I'm not an electrical engineer or technician, I'm sure my ideas can be improved upon greatly by people with more expertise and knowledge in this area and I know there a number of those types on this forum!

I had a used late 1990s IQ2000 control system as a backup for that eventuality. I got it in a package deal where I bought all the guts from a different dual jet pump Watkins (Tiger River) tub that a guy scrapped because it got frozen. I swapped that system in only to find out that there is an issue with the control panel circuit board. It doesn't communicate with or read the signal it's getting from the temp control thermostat and as a result the green Ready light starts flashing about 5 seconds after the tub is powered up and the system is shut out for calling for heat. I've checked and double checked the heat sensor and it's good so the problem has to be in the control head/panel (this is according to Watkins' tech support).
So that control system is pooched as well. For the time being, I've hot wired the heater and am manually keeping the water warm by turning the 30A GFCI in the hot tub's GFCI panel on and off. I can limp along that way for quite awhile while I figure out what my next move is going to be. I can't find another used IQ2000 or IQ2020 system that I can buy right now and I absolutely cannot afford to buy a new IQ2020 system from Watkins or anyone else. Besides that, I'm hesitant to buy a new control system that I know Watkins is going to make obsolete and discontinue supplying parts for in a few years like they've done with every one of their previous control systems.
I've done some research and I think I'm going to try and build a new control system using off-shelf-stuff but try to do it in a way that still has the same safety systems that my original control system had. Below is the architecture for my original system. I plan to base my new system design on that system but replace the Heater Control and High/low temp limit functions with the SmartPID M5 Pro which you can see on this page (scroll down a little ways) and this page. You can also check out this video on it. It's quite the little gadget!
The nice thing about this system (if I can build it), is that I'll be able to control my hot tub temperature and check the status of its temperature control system on my phone and the system will send me alerts through the cloud if an alarm condition occurs. If I replace the mechanical on/off relays in the heater circuit with SSRs I'll also be able to run the heater in PID mode which may save some energy and keep the water temperature more stable.
To protect the heater from no flow condition, I plan to run the ground wire for the heater relay control signal circuit through the flow switch (like it was before) so the heater can't be turned on if the flow switch isn't detecting any flow in the circ pump/heater line.
The SmartPID M5 Pro model is dual channel and can read off dual sensors so I plan to use Channel 2 to also monitor water temperature with a second sensor but this time be in On/Off mode if the water exceeds 115 F or drops below say, 45F or whatever. I was thinking Channel 2 will deliver the control signal for the circ pump, jet pumps and ozonator relays when the H2O temperature is between the two limits so those components will be able to get power under that condition but they won't be able to get power when either temp limit is reached. When the circ pump is shut off, the flow switch opens up and that will shut down the heater and/or prevent it from being turned on. That kind of duplicates most of the original safety systems I think.
If anybody is interested and can lend a hand with ideas and suggestions for how to design this DIY control system around this SmartPID and make it safe as possible, please feel free to come forward and make suggestions in this thread. I only have a rough idea as to how I'll design the system and given that I'm not an electrical engineer or technician, I'm sure my ideas can be improved upon greatly by people with more expertise and knowledge in this area and I know there a number of those types on this forum!

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