Gary, if I understand you, if the ball valve was working properly, I should be able to push against the ball and get it to move away from the seat and it should move back against the seat when I release it.
In my case, the end of the spring that rests against the ball has either broken off or uncoiled enough so that the ball was allowed to fall inside the spring. When I pushed against the ball, I wasn't able to move it at all I don't think. I had trouble keeping the allen wrench I used for pushing, from sliding off the ball. I must confess, that when I did push against the ball I gave it a fairly good push. Perhaps I jammed it somehow, and that is why it doesn't rattle when I shake the pump assembly. It seems to me something should rattle if the spring and ball are as far out of position as mine are (I'm still talking about the pump, not my anatomy. ). It also seems to me that the spring should out last the motor and its components etc. Shame on Carter. The pump hub, impellers, and housing look well made though.
Neil, I agree with you about using my thumb to try and slow the motor down to see if it was the problem. Have to admit that it wasn't the first time I acted before engaging brain fullly.
Rick, you're right. I've been reading about the value of a guage for a long time, and have procrastinated. Now, as Gary said, I may be in for a new VP-44. My nickel. Not smart. The old TV ad, "Pay me now, or pay me later" is usually true. When will I learn.
So, I need to put in a guage, at least I can then monitor the less than perfect factory arrangement. Because of what failed in my pump, the by-pass regulator that Bob Weis mentioned seems logical. The "Preporator" sounds like a top quality fix, but right now I'm not up for the investment.
Joe