Boy I can vouch for this.Even if you change your chlorine source, you'll still have salt in your water. Sometimes that salt level far exceeds what is needed to operate a SWG.
Behold my folly:
I just switched from liquid Chlorine to a salt system a couple weeks ago.
I did the math for my pool size and determined the amount to get me 2600 ppm salt, and I figured I had maybe 500 ppm in the water and that I would be low-mid range and trim up to optimum salt levels.
My Circupool RJ60+ started showing high salt ( 5000 ppm) after a couple days and I got some Taylor test strips and they read 5000 as well. I had ordered a Taylor salt test kit but got in a hurry and didn't want to wait before I added the salt.
My test kit arrived and verified that I did indeed have a sudden burst of stupidity by getting in a hurry... 5200 ppm.. haaa haaaa...
Break out the pump and dump about 8000 gallons of water, re-fill, wait a couple days and test again. 3200 ppm. ok , just a little more to get me close to 34-3500 ppm.
Then we get almost 8 1/2 inches of rain in a 24 hour period, after being bone dry all summer in N Texas.
The pool got a pretty good enema courtesy of Mother Nature and I just tested my salt this evening and it knocked out about 200 ppm, back to 3000.
I did bump my CYA from 50 to 70 and that pretty much stayed, so there is one thing going for me.
Going to wait a day or two more and re-test and trim back up.
As far as the "Salt pool will destroy your coping/ rust your pool furniture/ make your dog question it's gender", etc, it's never made sense to me either based on all the reading I have done here and other places.
I believe I have read that the salt in a "salt pool" pretty much doesn't evaporate, so if that statement is true, how does it cause all the damage ?
As stated above, contractors use it as a cop-out for shoddy work.