I'll mention briefly that all my equipment is Hayward right now, if that helps with recommendations. SWG, Heater/Chiller, Pump(s) and DE filter. some other lighting/features tied into the Omni hub also. And I do have the Chem Sense with the pH and ORP probes. They are not controlling anything...but the pH is usually within 0.1 of my taylor test drops. So I think it's pretty accurate so far.
A Pentair IntellipH is dependent on the installation of a Pentair IntelliChlor, and "from the factory" cannot work stand-alone. You'd have to do some hacking to get an IntellipH to work by itself. (Which we can show you how to do.) But several of the nicest features of the IpH are the ones that work in harmony with the IC. I could argue that the IpH, even on it's own, is a great solution, just not as good as the IpH/IC combo. As you review other systems, look for some of these niceties:
I really like the way the IpH tank is designed.
- It is air/acid fume tight, and has a way to vent its acid fumes away from your equipment pad
- It's got a great solution for adding acid: it's mouth accommodates an entire 1 gal acid jug, you place the sealed jug in the mouth and it punctures the seal as you lower it in. You can "dump and run" and stay away from acid fumes while the jug "glug-glugs" into the tank.
- The pump is built into the tank, so no separate things or tubes bolted to your wall.
- The pump is manufactured by Stenner
- The tank is a good size, about four gallons. You can buy very large acid tanks, 15 gals +, but would you want to? A pump/timer malfunction could empty the entire tank into the pool. Personally, I don't load more than about 1.5 gals of 31% acid into mine (which I then dilute 1:1 with water). So a major malfunction won't be a serious chemical accident in my pool.
- The tank has a wide base that can be bolted to the pad.
- The tank is semi-transparent so you can keep an eye on the level
With the Pentair IC in the mix, the combo has great safety features:
- the IpH controller limits the amount of acid it will pump each hour
- the IpH adds acid hourly, so that your pH stays very stable all day, every day. You don't get a big dump of acid once a day, or once a week
- the IpH controller can monitor and control the IC, and can regulate the IC's dispensing in 1% increments
- the IpH monitors the IC's temperature and flow sensors, and so will not pump acid under the wrong conidtions
- the IpH shuts down the IC while the IpH is dispensing acid, so you don't get a dangerous mix of acid and chlorine at the same time in your pipes
- the IpH controller offers very easy acid dispensing adjustments in 1% increments
If you add an acid injection system, you need to figure out how to add some of the safeguards that are built in to the IpH/IC combo:
- you can't allow a timer to pump acid while your SWG is producing chlorine, and
- you can't allow a timer to pump acid unless water is flowing in the plumbing, and
- you need to limit the amount of acid pumped at any one time in case of a timer or pump failure.
You can run a simple timer/pump acid system without these safeguards, but I strongly recommend against doing that.
That's the short version...
