I just posed over in "Everything else" regarding a problem with the light and cover for this pool. I figured this question about the chlorine generator belonged in it's proper section of the forum.
The SWG
The pool is a salt pool with a "Steriphor cpm223" module that seems to control the electrolysis unit as well as an automatic acid injection module for PH adjustment to a target of 7.2ph. Strangely the unit doesn't even have the model number written on it - I only found it by trawling google images The only technical document I could find online is here Manual - PDF Format. Unfortunately the manual is in French but using google document translate (Google Translate) I can get the operation instructions in English.
What concerns me is that the instructions at section 2.1 states "The basin should be salted at 5 grams per liter, or 5 kg per m3". Is that not very high compared to normal salt pools? Everything I've read suggests that the typical salt target is around 3500 ppm, not 5000 ppm as this would be. I already purchased 275kg of salt before I found this manual, but I guess I'll be heading out to buy some more as it seems ~400kg is required for my ~76000 litre pool.
I actually bought a digital salt ppt tester yesterday so just ran a quick test to get a qualitative idea of the difference in saltiness levels. I dissolved some salt in a water glass to get 3.5 ppt (3500 ppm, or 3.5g/L I guess) and tasted that compared to another glass set to 5000 ppm. The taste difference was notable but certainly the water wasn't "horribly salty" at the higher level so I guess it will be okay in terms of actual usability. Still strange that my system requires this higher level. Any ideas why? Are there any benefits to having a higher ppm?
Section 3.4 and 3.5 of the manual also state "The recommended oxidant level should be between 0.3 and 1.0 ppm." and "NEVER EXCEED 2 ppm if metallic elements are in contact with the water." (I have a metallic motor for the automatic cover, and the cover slats themselves are metal so that applies to me). The 0.3-1.0 ppm range for free-chlorine (I assume?) also seem a bit lower than typically recommended for pools. Is this because the higher salt ppm level contributes to keeping everything clean?
The unit doesn't seem to have a readout for ppm, which I think is a bit strange. It's got a temperature probe and a PH testing probe, but no ppm probe or screen readout. If the 5000 ppm is so crucial, I'm surprised that the unit doesn't automatically give that as a readout. Is this because the salinity level in the water shouldn't really change very frequently (compared to ph and temperature), so they left that function down to manual inspection?
I'm still trying to find more technical specs for this unit. I just got the troublefreepool app so need to figure out the 24 hour SWG Chlorine Output, but quite predictably this model isn't listed in the app.
Images:
The SWG
The pool is a salt pool with a "Steriphor cpm223" module that seems to control the electrolysis unit as well as an automatic acid injection module for PH adjustment to a target of 7.2ph. Strangely the unit doesn't even have the model number written on it - I only found it by trawling google images The only technical document I could find online is here Manual - PDF Format. Unfortunately the manual is in French but using google document translate (Google Translate) I can get the operation instructions in English.
What concerns me is that the instructions at section 2.1 states "The basin should be salted at 5 grams per liter, or 5 kg per m3". Is that not very high compared to normal salt pools? Everything I've read suggests that the typical salt target is around 3500 ppm, not 5000 ppm as this would be. I already purchased 275kg of salt before I found this manual, but I guess I'll be heading out to buy some more as it seems ~400kg is required for my ~76000 litre pool.
I actually bought a digital salt ppt tester yesterday so just ran a quick test to get a qualitative idea of the difference in saltiness levels. I dissolved some salt in a water glass to get 3.5 ppt (3500 ppm, or 3.5g/L I guess) and tasted that compared to another glass set to 5000 ppm. The taste difference was notable but certainly the water wasn't "horribly salty" at the higher level so I guess it will be okay in terms of actual usability. Still strange that my system requires this higher level. Any ideas why? Are there any benefits to having a higher ppm?
Section 3.4 and 3.5 of the manual also state "The recommended oxidant level should be between 0.3 and 1.0 ppm." and "NEVER EXCEED 2 ppm if metallic elements are in contact with the water." (I have a metallic motor for the automatic cover, and the cover slats themselves are metal so that applies to me). The 0.3-1.0 ppm range for free-chlorine (I assume?) also seem a bit lower than typically recommended for pools. Is this because the higher salt ppm level contributes to keeping everything clean?
The unit doesn't seem to have a readout for ppm, which I think is a bit strange. It's got a temperature probe and a PH testing probe, but no ppm probe or screen readout. If the 5000 ppm is so crucial, I'm surprised that the unit doesn't automatically give that as a readout. Is this because the salinity level in the water shouldn't really change very frequently (compared to ph and temperature), so they left that function down to manual inspection?
I'm still trying to find more technical specs for this unit. I just got the troublefreepool app so need to figure out the 24 hour SWG Chlorine Output, but quite predictably this model isn't listed in the app.
Images: