hi guys,
I ordered a calimar swg from unlimited pool supply and the wifi pool kit from atlas scientific, waiting for them to get here and in the meantime I was preparing for the installation.
I have a couple of questions, here is the situation right now


this is where a chlorinator is installed right now (not in use anymore).
I am planning to put a 3 way valve at the exit of the water heater so I can have two lines:
- on the first line, in order: union, ph probe, acid feed line, salt cell, check valve. The salt cell would work also as a second union to remove the all line leaving the check valve to block the flow
- nothing on the second line, it is needed in case I need to bypass the first line
The two lines will reconnect and go into the ground.
Pipes are 2 inches and I wanted to know if it is easy to remove the existing fittings.
Specifically, the line going into the ground seems pretty close to the dirt already, I would prefer to remove reuse that 90 degree elbow as opposed to cut the pipe below it. I did some research a while back and I saw that is possible to heat the pipe on the inside to disconnect it but I have no idea how that works in practice and if it is feasible with my pipes that seem to be quite old (probably close to 20 years old)
And any other suggestion is welcomed
I ordered a calimar swg from unlimited pool supply and the wifi pool kit from atlas scientific, waiting for them to get here and in the meantime I was preparing for the installation.
I have a couple of questions, here is the situation right now


this is where a chlorinator is installed right now (not in use anymore).
I am planning to put a 3 way valve at the exit of the water heater so I can have two lines:
- on the first line, in order: union, ph probe, acid feed line, salt cell, check valve. The salt cell would work also as a second union to remove the all line leaving the check valve to block the flow
- nothing on the second line, it is needed in case I need to bypass the first line
The two lines will reconnect and go into the ground.
Pipes are 2 inches and I wanted to know if it is easy to remove the existing fittings.
Specifically, the line going into the ground seems pretty close to the dirt already, I would prefer to remove reuse that 90 degree elbow as opposed to cut the pipe below it. I did some research a while back and I saw that is possible to heat the pipe on the inside to disconnect it but I have no idea how that works in practice and if it is feasible with my pipes that seem to be quite old (probably close to 20 years old)
And any other suggestion is welcomed