Impeller with worn molded number
PartSnap should look for vane shape, shaft seal context, pump family, and a second proof photo of the pump label.
- Needed proof: model plate
- Needed proof: diameter or stamped number
- Escalate when number is unreadable
These are conservative field examples for SplashLens and PartSnap. They show what the app should ask for before a tech orders, escalates, or saves proof. No example is a manufacturer-confirmed fitment claim.
Try PartSnap FreePartSnap should look for vane shape, shaft seal context, pump family, and a second proof photo of the pump label.
Use unions, cable connector, controller model, cell length, and flow switch context to narrow the family without pretending certainty.
Robot parts often look similar across families. PartSnap should ask for cleaner model, power supply label, track profile, and basket style.
Automation work needs safety language and board/box model proof. The app should help package a cleaner senior-tech ask.
Lighting examples should ask for voltage, niche/fixture style, transformer label, and GFCI behavior before any recommendation.
PartSnap should prompt for tank model, grid count/height, manifold shape, and air-relief assembly proof.
Prompt for pipe size, valve body markings, actuator model, lid screw pattern, and O-ring dimensions.
Capture the display code, heater model, gas/electric context, serial plate, and manual reference before field action.
Ask for control box label, motor plate, switch style, cover brand, and qualified-safety verification.
Pool schools, service companies, vendors, creators, and manufacturers can send a private example for feedback or partnership discussion. SplashLens can build safe training scenarios without implying endorsement.