- Nov 12, 2017
- 12,663
- Pool Size
- 12300
- Surface
- Plaster
- Chlorine
- Salt Water Generator
- SWG Type
- Pentair Intellichlor IC-40
A most excellent and accurate perspective. It is easy to get carried away with gizmos without considering perfectly adequate alternatives. I, on the other hand, am a gluten for punishment, have an even simpler pool than chiefwej (no spa, no in-floor) and regret my automation selection only because I wish I had a more elaborate model! 
My rebut to his take is that the "need" for automation is not based on how simple your pool is, as if a big complicated pool requires automation, and a small, simple pool would not get decent ROI. It's more about what you want to be able to do with your pool and equipment, and what you're willing and able to do and spend to achieve that. There are other considerations:
- willingness to explore and learn yourself how to put together a non-integrated solution (not everybody can or wants to)
- ease of use
- ease of maintenance
- appearance
- no simple, one-stop tech or service support for a multi-brand system
- missing out on some of the niceties only a one-brand, integrated system can provide
- reliability
To name but some...
There are no hard and fast rules. Explore what's possible with automation. Be clear about what it can and cannot do, be clear about what each model can and cannot do (this is where I went wrong). Decide what of what it can do you want. Then make your decision on the make and model, or if you want one at all, based on that data. You can't just ask: what should I buy? You first have to answer: what do I want to do?
My rebut to his take is that the "need" for automation is not based on how simple your pool is, as if a big complicated pool requires automation, and a small, simple pool would not get decent ROI. It's more about what you want to be able to do with your pool and equipment, and what you're willing and able to do and spend to achieve that. There are other considerations:
- willingness to explore and learn yourself how to put together a non-integrated solution (not everybody can or wants to)
- ease of use
- ease of maintenance
- appearance
- no simple, one-stop tech or service support for a multi-brand system
- missing out on some of the niceties only a one-brand, integrated system can provide
- reliability
To name but some...
There are no hard and fast rules. Explore what's possible with automation. Be clear about what it can and cannot do, be clear about what each model can and cannot do (this is where I went wrong). Decide what of what it can do you want. Then make your decision on the make and model, or if you want one at all, based on that data. You can't just ask: what should I buy? You first have to answer: what do I want to do?