- Mar 5, 2020
- 3,221
- Pool Size
- 66000
- Surface
- Plaster
- Chlorine
- Salt Water Generator
- SWG Type
- Astral Viron V35
all but the oak are my neighbors
Tell me about the neighbour's tree. Our neighbour has a gum tree. Beautiful tree, but gums lose leaves like crazy in summer. And they shed strings of bark. No automated system can keep up with these, only way is the good old net.
But I haven't found that leaves and bark create much of extra chlorine demand. At least not at the FC I am maintaining (10% of CYA seem to work well for me).
What's important to understand is that chlorine kills organics already at very low levels, but the kill rate is proportional to the HOCl concentration. If the kill rate is higher then algae's reproduction rate, then a little bit of chlorine will kill whatever got in fast, and you're done. At lower levels, chlorine will also kill some algae, but by the longer time it takes to kill what initially got in, some algae will have reproduced, meaning that you will need more algae to eventually kill everything, and you might in total notice a higher chlorine demand.
So, and that is just me thinking out loud, it could make sense that a pool that has a high intake of algae spores needs a higher FC level compared to a pool that is easy to keep clean.
I guess, with running the pump on 24/7 with the SWG on a low setting, you will get to a situation where you will build up some chlorine overnight, whereas during the day you will be underproducing. You'd call it dialled in when FC at sunset and after all the bather load is still above your minimum level. In the morning, you'll reach the high point.
Whereas with running the pump just during the day (let's call it 12/7), you'll be more or less replacing chlorine as it gets used, resulting in a more even FC throughout a 24h period.
Assuming that both approaches would be dialled in so that the overall min is the same, the 24/7 method will probably produce more of an overshoot during the night, whereas the 12/7 method will maintain a more even FC closer to your min the whole time.
It might not just be the overall min, but also the average FC throughout the whole day that needs to be considered when comparing different chlorination schedules. And maybe the 24/7 wins in terms of lowest possible min levels.
I'm not saying that's what it is, just thinking out loud. Happy for feedback.
In summary, running 24/7 in a way that on hot, high UV days with high bather load you reach your overall min FC, and not being OCD about adjusting the SWG for every single cloudy day, is probably the way that's allowing the lowest overall min FC. But practically, you'll be higher most of the time, often by a lot.