The whole reason why I joined this forum is because looking around to see about combined SWG and mineral systems, I percolated my way over here.
As I understand, nobody here is a fan of mineral systems--and I am on board with the reasoning. The gist I get is that the marketing of these systems is "chemical free" or "all natural" or some other nonsense, when in fact there's no getting around actually needing sanitizer to sanitize your water (who knew?). Mineral systems rely on heavy metals that work too slow to kill stuff, so they're still going to take chlorine to work right.
My problem is that nobody actually addressed the reason why I was curious about mineral systems to being with--making the pool safer for all the metallic bits and bobs around it. There a slide with metal bolts and an there's especially an automatic pool cover with nice metal tracks at the house I'm moving into that look almost designed to collect some nice, corrosive salt water while the pool is being used.
I've yet to see a mineral system advertise this, but *in theory* a mineral system needs less chlorine, which *in theory* means less salt, which *in theory* means less corrosion, right? Further, *in theory* an aqueous solution of metallic compounds (like what you get when you're adding all that copper and silver) is itself less corrosive than water without the compounds, isn't it?
If it's not obvious, I'm not super tied to this idea but I haven't seen anyone talk about mineral systems in these terms. It's all theoretical in my head based on some college work where I built a zinc-oxide electrolysis system fifteen years ago and halfway-remember college chemistry courses.
As I understand, nobody here is a fan of mineral systems--and I am on board with the reasoning. The gist I get is that the marketing of these systems is "chemical free" or "all natural" or some other nonsense, when in fact there's no getting around actually needing sanitizer to sanitize your water (who knew?). Mineral systems rely on heavy metals that work too slow to kill stuff, so they're still going to take chlorine to work right.
My problem is that nobody actually addressed the reason why I was curious about mineral systems to being with--making the pool safer for all the metallic bits and bobs around it. There a slide with metal bolts and an there's especially an automatic pool cover with nice metal tracks at the house I'm moving into that look almost designed to collect some nice, corrosive salt water while the pool is being used.
I've yet to see a mineral system advertise this, but *in theory* a mineral system needs less chlorine, which *in theory* means less salt, which *in theory* means less corrosion, right? Further, *in theory* an aqueous solution of metallic compounds (like what you get when you're adding all that copper and silver) is itself less corrosive than water without the compounds, isn't it?
If it's not obvious, I'm not super tied to this idea but I haven't seen anyone talk about mineral systems in these terms. It's all theoretical in my head based on some college work where I built a zinc-oxide electrolysis system fifteen years ago and halfway-remember college chemistry courses.
Last edited: