Home
What's new
Latest activity
Authors
Store
Latest reviews
Search products
Forums
New posts
Search forums
What's new
New posts
New listings
New products
New profile posts
Latest activity
Members
Current visitors
New profile posts
Search profile posts
Log in
Register
Cart
Cart
Loading…
What's new
Search
Search
Search titles only
By:
New posts
Search forums
Search titles only
By:
Menu
Log in
Register
Navigation
Install the app
Install
More options
Change style
Contact us
Close Menu
Forums
SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
Road Side Pub
School me on salt water pools
JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.
You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.
You should upgrade or use an
alternative browser
.
Reply to thread
Message
<blockquote data-quote="DaleM" data-source="post: 15945584" data-attributes="member: 7405"><p>Test water before adding salt. Check out Haywards salt water control boxes.</p><p></p><p>The coolest thing about the system is you skin and clothes do not smell like chlorine. Granted the sodium chloride (salt) is making chlorine through the salt cell with electrolysis versus adding chlorine manually.</p><p></p><p>There is a push button method to super chlorinate the pool after hard use or before using after seaonal pauses. </p><p></p><p>You will only lose salt if your pool has a leak, hard rains, or splash loss then refilling water level.</p><p></p><p>Salt levels, really depending on what you system recommends should be about 2700-3600ppm. The water will not taste salty or have the mildest of saline noticeable. </p><p></p><p>The company that built my pool maintained it for the first year, then we went with a local guy who has a great reputation.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DaleM, post: 15945584, member: 7405"] Test water before adding salt. Check out Haywards salt water control boxes. The coolest thing about the system is you skin and clothes do not smell like chlorine. Granted the sodium chloride (salt) is making chlorine through the salt cell with electrolysis versus adding chlorine manually. There is a push button method to super chlorinate the pool after hard use or before using after seaonal pauses. You will only lose salt if your pool has a leak, hard rains, or splash loss then refilling water level. Salt levels, really depending on what you system recommends should be about 2700-3600ppm. The water will not taste salty or have the mildest of saline noticeable. The company that built my pool maintained it for the first year, then we went with a local guy who has a great reputation. [/QUOTE]
Insert quotes…
Verification
Post reply
Forums
SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
Road Side Pub
School me on salt water pools
Top