I am taking the liberty of publishing these words from Mark @ Watermaid Canada. At my invitation, Mark has joined the forum but I cautioned him about direct advertising, which some might construe this info to be......so I'll do it.
The chemistry is over my head but it seems to stem from a good bit of practical application so I'd like to see the subject batted around here in the Deep End a bit.
What do you think?
The chemistry is over my head but it seems to stem from a good bit of practical application so I'd like to see the subject batted around here in the Deep End a bit.
Watermaid recommends that customers add 50 lbs. of magnesium chloride to their pools every year. Calcium is attracted to the cathode plate of a salt chlorinator and can form hard scale. Adding magnesium softens the scale and makes it mushy. Normal water flow tends to flush the scale off of the cell plates. It also adds hardness to the water without using calcium. This once again reduces scale formation. Magnesium chloride will not harm a Watermaid cell. In fact it will increase the cell life. If you let a cell scale up, water flow will reduce and the cell will overheat. This will damage the cell
What do you think?