Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
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#16
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We are exploring the salt water versus chlorine pool and this information is extremely helpful! Thank you so much for sharing what you have learned! |
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#17
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Wiseman did my pool, ioniser and,ozanater(spelling off) pool uses very little chemicals , no algae, no balance swings. Self cleaning, maybe spend $175.00/year. No cleaning company
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#18
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A saltwater pool creates chlorine by electrolysis, one by-product is that ph rises as the acid is used in the process, so you will always have feed the pool acid, it’s basically what’s being turned into chlorine.
Quoted form Wikipedia: Salt water chlorination produces an excess of hydroxyl ions whilst releasing chlorine from salt, which makes the pool alkaline (sodium hydroxide, NaOH, caustic soda). This requires the frequent addition of hydrochloric acid (HCl, also known as muriatic acid) to neutralise the alkalinity and convert the sodium hydroxide back into sodium chloride (i.e., table salt), which can be split by electrolysis again. Thus the consumable supplying all the chlorine is in fact the hydrochloric acid, with the salt acting as a non-consumed intermediary, being split and reformed. |
#19
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Bottom line, it is trial and error as every pool has a unique personality that needs to be managed. I keep a detailed log of what the appropriate chlorinator setting is for every season. In the summer it runs at about 25 - 30%, in the spring and fall it runs about 15%, and in the winter it typically runs at about 7%, but can need to be set as low as 3% if the cover is on most of the time. Hope that helps. |
#20
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My pool in GA was where I first heard about salt water pools. After researching it a great deal we went ahead with a salt system. My chemical cost went from the $150-$200 range per month to about $200-$300 for the entire year! The pool water is softer on the skin and far less harsh on the eyes. I would never go back. I'm sure someone has stated it here, but a salt water pool is still a chlorine pool. The chlorine is generated from the salt in the water, and you can keep your chlorine levels lower as the salt cell is continuously generating chlorine as long as the pump is running. The problem with ozone or UV systems is that these systems can only disinfect water that passes through them directly. If there are any stagnant areas in the pool (behind the light, ladder, etc) that water never gets disinfected and will cause algae blooms. If you have ozone or UV, you'll still need to add chlorine to insure you don't have issues... and if you have to add chlorine anyway, why worry about two systems? As an FYI - the pool that cost $150-$200 was a LARGE pool. 50K gallons. The 2nd pool with the SWG was only 40K gallons - but the savings were still substantial. Last edited by PoolBrews; 08-25-2020 at 01:12 PM. Reason: add clarification |
#21
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I have had a pool for 10 years. Never checked the levels. That's what I hire T&D for. Only once, the levels were so high and could not be brought down, so they emptied my pool and refilled it. The total cost was $80 for the water. Not bad for an 30' pool.
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