SWG Install and Opening Help

Except for possible loss of sleep, no downside to doing an OCLT.

The flow switch does cut power to the cell, so essentially the same as turning it off. But flow switches are meant to be a backup safety, and not a primary on/off control. They do fail (mine did, after a year!) Better to bump up the low to allow the SWCG to generate all day, and dial it down in the settings, so you still meet your CL needs. Turn down your high speed setting (rpm or time) a bit, if you want to balance the energy savings.

As long as there is the minimum flow, the SWCG will generate the same amount when getting power, no matter the amount of water through it. The % setting on it is not a real "strength or concentration" setting, it is a timer - so while getting power, turn on for 50% of the time, turn off for 50%, etc. Therefore the same effect over time as if it actually could directly increase/decrease the amount generated. Let the box control the on/off cycle, and keep your pump up just enough to allow it to do so at any time in the day. Then the flow switch can fill its real role as a backup safety.
 
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Did not pass the OCLT. I also decided to check my CYA again after reading the page on here on how to do it. It's much more descriptive than the sheet that came with the test kit. I've been using 40 as my CYA but this morning it tested at 50. I know CYA won't just go up, so I'm assuming I've been doing my SLAM at a slightly lower than required FC level.

Also I've been brushing and vacuuming daily and every day there looks like new dirt on the bottom. I assumed this was environmental stuff because we've had a lot of storms recently, but is that just dead algae? The pool seems clear and all ladders and steps are out and I brush walls, skimmers, and weir doors inside and out. If that is algae dying off I guess not seeing that anymore is a good sign when it happens?
 
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Likely a combination - dead algae and dirt. Brushing alone gets it kicked back up into suspension in the water. Then taken out by your filter. But depending on a host of factors, the filter only gets some percentage. The rest resettles. Along with any new dead things and dirt. A manual vacuum or a robot gets a lot more of the "stuff" directly to the filter, and far less to resettle out. The OCLT and CC reading, with having very little settle out, will tell the tale. Especially at the start of a SLAM, it can be very surprising how much you see on the bottom each day - a lot more suspended and now killed than the clarity of the water might suggest.

Especially rain, but also wind, can bring in more dirt. Sometimes a lot. So don't assume you have algae again right away after the SLAM. The CC will give a flag, and then the OCLT can confirm. Once you get into the swing of what is normal for your pool, you'll get pretty good at judging how concerned to be. If you always keep your CL at the high end of the recommended range (or even join #teamrunhot by being a bit above!), the odds of growing algae go way, way down. I normally don't think about algae, as long as my CC is <= 1, pool is TFP clear, and if there is an environmental reason (wind/rain) for the "stuff". Then I just assume dirt and brush or vac to make it pretty again.

BTW - update your signature with details about your pool. It helps a lot for us to tailor the information specifically to you. Create Your Signature - Further Reading

If you pay the outrageous (grin!) $8/yr for the PoolMath app subscription, you can link your logs by using the same username as here. Then we can easily see your history of readings and chem adds, to further refine answers to problems. Click on my user name to see the logs for how I am lurching toward a balanced pool.
 
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I know CYA won't just go up, so I'm assuming I've been doing my SLAM at a slightly lower than required FC level.
Every little bit helps and all, but its not going to change the price of beer. Thank Heavens for that. (y)

Some people put very little effort in and its low single digits by the time they dose. Id rather see steady 12s when it really should have been 16, then 16 to 2. (Etc).
I assumed this was environmental stuff because we've had a lot of storms recently, but is that just dead algae?
When Mother nature is shedding its impossible to know how much is which. The failed OCLT says that at least some of it was algae.
 
Timeline update. I shocked Monday night enough to get it up at FC of 20. I typically don't check again after I add, I just add and go to bed. Tuesday morning it was pouring, and I grabbed a sample at 6 AM and it was FC of 18. I decided to let it go throughout the day. I checked again at 8 PM and it was FC of 15. I decided to do another OCLT and this morning at 6:15 it was 13.5, so still a failure. At this point in time I've gone through 17 gallons of LC and only have 1 left, so I'll need to run out and get more. We're getting there, slowly, but we're getting there.
 
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