Rbcconst
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Getting ready to build a pool. Should it be salt water or Chlorine and why?
Same for me - The summer sun here in Phoenix requires me to increase the chlorine in the summer, but we have an oversized generator and it can keep up most of the time. Over the long haul, I think the cost is about the same between both setups. With chlorine, you just spend it a little bit at a time over the years vs a large expense every few years to replace the chlorine generator.I'm running a salt system here in Phoenix and we like it.
I do have the variable speed pump set to run most of the daylight hours but at an rpm just high enough to trigger the flow switch and activate the chlorine generator.
We love the feel of the water and I like the easier maintenance.
Getting ready to build a pool. Should it be salt water or Chlorine and why?
Grew up will chlorine pool in Boston. Dad still uses chlorine Today. I put a pool in here in Charlotte 8 years ago, have chlorine generator, salt cell. love it. Has been great in this environment. Cell lasted 7 years , put new one in this year. Still way ahead versus clhlorine cost And I feel like the water feels more “silky”. I like the fact it is automatic. Of course you can get an auto chlorinator with chlorine too.
In Havasu?The silky feeling is because you have a "balanced" pool.
You can do the same thing with any pool, but most people just don't do it.
"I haven't changed my water in five years, and it's just fine!"
Havasu is chlorine for the same reasons mentioned above regarding TDS (basically the water’s capacity to hold solids). Also costs about $200 including water and chemicals to drain and refill the pool there annually. I just went to salt in Murrieta and went from constantly struggling with high CYA that the chlorine tablets add to the pool while keeping the chlorine level high enough to fight back algae in 85 degree water to a pretty easy to maintain setup with the salt generator. I do run the pump 8-10 hours per day and actually had to dial the generator back to about 40% to keep it from making too much chlorine. I test the water every week or two and it’s always on point minus PH adjustments that I always had to make even with a chlorine only pool. Salt gets converted to chlorine and when the chlorine breaks down it turns back into salt so aside from rain overflow diluting the salt it should stay pretty maintenance free. 4 months in I’m pretty happy with it with no pool guy and just working it myself. No more constant algae blooms even with chemical levels being perfect for months on the old setup. I don’t know why some pool guys hate the salt systems so much.Does not seem to be a sure win answer. Seems about 50/50. Pool will be in the inland empire.
than you for the feedback. That sounds pretty easy. I am leaning towards Salt I just don't want to make a mistake so I am asking around to see what everyone's experience is with Salt.Havasu is chlorine for the same reasons mentioned above regarding TDS (basically the water’s capacity to hold solids). Also costs about $200 including water and chemicals to drain and refill the pool there annually. I just went to salt in Murrieta and went from constantly struggling with high CYA that the chlorine tablets add to the pool while keeping the chlorine level high enough to fight back algae in 85 degree water to a pretty easy to maintain setup with the salt generator. I do run the pump 8-10 hours per day and actually had to dial the generator back to about 40% to keep it from making too much chlorine. I test the water every week or two and it’s always on point minus PH adjustments that I always had to make even with a chlorine only pool. Salt gets converted to chlorine and when the chlorine breaks down it turns back into salt so aside from rain overflow diluting the salt it should stay pretty maintenance free. 4 months in I’m pretty happy with it with no pool guy and just working it myself. No more constant algae blooms even with chemical levels being perfect for months on the old setup. I don’t know why some pool guys hate the salt systems so much.
In Havasu?
It isn't a deal breaker either way, but on ours after about 8 years of dealing with the salt and marinating that stupid chlorine generator cell in straight muriatic acid to clean it every few months when it quit working I trashed the whole setup and replaced it with a 90 dollar tablet stack chlorinator . The other thing was I had a nice cover pro recessed cover, and all the pool equipment in a nice room so there was corrosion to the metal components/fasteners etc similar to dunking your steel boat trailer in Marine Staduim. Not having the acid demand from the salt, or having to add salt after big rains or parties where water was lost was nice, but taking care of the salt pool did make me a better "pool guy" going forward. On mine having the good variable speed pump circulating at different rates and cycles for a lot of hours per day made it sparkle even after not looking at it for weeksDoes not seem to be a sure win answer. Seems about 50/50. Pool will be in the inland empire.
Tap water analysis pleaseMy dad has had a saltwater pool for 20+ years. A much better swimming and jacuzzi experience overall. If I was to put in a pool I would go saltwater 1000%
Tap water analysis please
Thank you for the detailed info and suggestions. I will hire a pool service for sure, not sure how to know i have a good one. Salt seems to be a good way to go but hard to maintain if someone doesnt know what they are doing.Depends on location.
IE Ca I’d say yes salt
OC we still do salt, but many request ozone or uv or combo of both instead of salt
havasu hard water, it’s 50/50. I have on both pools, also have service guy to maintain pools. Never had any issues with salt on my own or customers. The few calls I do get are owners that hired a shitty pool guy that don‘t understand salt, controls, vs pumps etc.
Cost comparison chlorine to salt is nearly a wash over 5 years ( life exp of cell at 100% longer if output lowered )
On a new pool, the only area of concern for corrosion is the pool heater. Pumps, filters, valves, plumbing, lights, conduits, float autofill valves, etc… are all plastic so no concerns w salt
couple options or combo of both. Order pentair hd heater or any manufacture asme version that has cupro nickel exchanger. Also they make automated valve bypass kits for heaters when not in use. That actually helps with flow and eliminates salt water cycling thru heater.
most common reason salt pools screw up heaters is owner or service guy put way over the needed salt ppm. Next is owner or pool guy dumps gallon or more of acid every week to combat ph levels. But in turn making the water corrosive for 4+ of the following days of adding, so next week it’s near leveling off and they dump again and start it corrosive all over again. Never ending weekly F up
the water feeling silky is the salt in water, same as water softener on house. Salt does get converted to chlorine, dies and back to salt, never ending cycle. The only true benefit is can keep a consistent low level, with ability to max output and raise level after party’s etc
versus liquid, spike when service guy comes and drops through out week. Not a problem if your pool is serviced thur-fri, but if your serviced on Mon or Tuesday usually by weekend when you use pool it’s nearly depleted for bather load, come Monday your pool guy hates you for destroying the pool.
tabs build up conditioner so water has to be dumped to lower every year or 2
They all have draw backs and addl steps to maintain.
Select the one that makes you feel like it’s the easiest for you.
Thank you for the detailed info and suggestions. I will hire a pool service for sure, not sure how to know i have a good one. Salt seems to be a good way to go but hard to maintain if someone doesnt know what they are doing.
It’s not hard to maintain. Just people have the perception it is. Because of cell replacement cost they get sticker shock and say F that thing. Meantime they ran an undersized cell at 100% on a system that was likely running 50-75% of needed filtration time. So it was never going to keep up and pool looked like shitThank you for the detailed info and suggestions. I will hire a pool service for sure, not sure how to know i have a good one. Salt seems to be a good way to go but hard to maintain if someone doesnt know what they are doing.
Where do you get non stabilized tabs?The only pool guy you can trust is the one in your bathroom mirror. No one will do a better job than him.
A lot of the drawbacks Tim mentioned are easily avoidable if you do it yourself.
And Tim will tell you straight out ...
I'm the Only one he knows that uses one of these things!
HASA Liquid Feeder New Liquidator Automatic Chlorine Feeder 8 Gallon | 96300 https://a.co/d/6aN9pDM
This, and non stabilized tabs and shock, make life easy, for me.
Where do you get non stabilized tabs?
Non stabilized tablets are calcium hypochlorite. Be very careful handling. no greasy hands from wrenching on shit. cal hypo can and does react and explode.Any legit pool store? You can order em online too.
I honestly only use em when the liquid chlorinator can't keep up. (Days like today).
Supposed to be 108 here in SoCal!
Non stabilized tablets are calcium hypochlorite. Be very careful handling. no greasy hands from wrenching on shit. cal hypo can and does react and explode.
Way way way back, I had a small bucket of what I thought was conditioner in bed of truck, the side blew out of bucket.Interesting...
What do they do in a campfire?
Asking for a friend of course.
Way way way back, I had a small bucket of what I thought was conditioner in bed of truck, the side blew out of bucket.
didn't want it all over bed of truck, so I tossed in trash can. On top of oily rags. Went inside house.
minute later I hear fireworks going off. Cal hypo not conditioner. Was exploding and lit trash can on fire.
in a camp fire, I think you should try and report back