Poolsean said:
Low salt protection is a requirement by UL1081. Operating at low salt levels will cause premature damage, but what's more important is that the efficiency of the system is reduced and not as much chlorine is produced. UL is not concerned that the cell will fail prematurely, they are concerned that there will not be enough chlorine generated to keep the pool water safe.
Increasing the low salt protection feature is not a solution. We have a low salt warning at 2400 ppm. And a low salt cut off at 1900 ppm.
Hopefully, the pool owner pays proper attention to their system to ensure that their salt level is at the recommended 3000 ppm range.
I guess I took offense when you assumed our tri-sensor was an example of a design fault. Again, as stated, we give a warning light, a display message that tells the pool owner how much salt to add to maintain 3000 ppm (does yours do that?), and hopefully, the warning light would be recognized by the pool owner and adjusted so that these problems do not occur. Raising the low salt limit higher is not a solution.
TRI-SENSOR ASSEMBLY
ensures that adequate Flow, Salt Level, and Water
Temperatures are satisfactory to
prevent abusive conditions for the
cell to operate.
I mainly have a problem with highlighted part. If you claim that your sensor is preventing something, it must do it. If it doesn't do it then there a design problem (be it technical, or at a conceptual level) or a misleading information provided.
The approach we take when we design and market our systems is: don't advertise something we don't do and don't publish specs which are "absolute maximums in ideal conditions". And we certainly don't "hope that owner will notice the light and do the right thing". We prefer to base design of our systems on knowledge, rather than hope.

If there is some minimum level for whatever reason, it is enforced at a level where it is actually able to prevent malfunction.
In general, australian and european markets are a bit different to US. Here people prefer to have reliable systems with as little bells and whistles as possible. We actually have people asking for units with old mechanical timers (or even with no timers at all) because they fell it will be more reliable and easier to use than LCD timers.
That's probably why not many US manufactured chlorinators found their way to Australia and vice versa.
As these are our main markets, we build top quality systems with accent made on a reliability and performance rather than bells and whistles. Consequently we test every feature thoroughly, before implementing it in our systems. We like to compare them with russian battleships. Everything is made 3 times stronger than necessary.
Saying that,t i don't discount the fact that in a short future AutoChlor will make a system loaded with all the bells and whistles specifically directed at US market.
Poolsean said:
Question for you, what happens to your power supply if the salt level is allows to go below 3000 ppm? How do you determine salt level?
Nothing. It will just turn off and give an error light. Why would anything else happen?
If you feel like continuing this discussion the we probably should ask the mods to branch part of this topic into another area.