a,
That's great! There are many, many ways to schedule. Here's the process I went through:
First set your speeds
- Set maximum speed as "Speed 1".
- Next set the speed needed for closing your swg flow switch (usually ~1700 rpm) as "Speed 2"
- Set the minimum flow speed that just barely keeps positive flow (usually around 500 rpm) as "Speed 3"
Now set your first pass settings
- Set Speed 1 for about 4 hrs. This is the minimum time to skim and remove debris from your pool. It varies a LOT by pool but this is a good starting point.
- Add sufficient time at Speed 2 so that you can run the swg in addition to Speed 1 so your total FC added to the pool is about 3 ppm.
- Add any additional time at Speed 3 needed for your personal preferences such as time for spillover or other features.
Iterate to Tweak Settings
- Monitor FC daily to see the trend in FC. Adjust runtime up or down .2 -.3 ppm per day no more than every other day UNLESS FC is below minimum target for your CYA level. If that happens add liquid chlorine to bring FC up to max target. Then continue adjusting over next day or two.
- After FC is "fairly stable" let it run for a week or two. FC can cycle a few ppm above target and down to target. If you try to target exact requirement and adjust to this every day you will go nuts and the pool will go out of control. The idea is to let it cycle down to target and a few ppm above.
- After a few weeks if you prefer to tighten the cycle you can adjust run time or % power down slightly. I found setting % power at 40% gave me run times I could manage with a daily cycle that worked great for the first 3 years. Run time only needed to be adjusted two or three times per year.
There are literally millions of different combinations that work for people with different pools, usages, weather, and personal preferences. We have experts on here that run their vs pump on low 24/7 and just adjust swg run time periodically. May be worth a try for you. Our experts can be a little "weird" but they're all very, very smart!
I hope this is helpful.
Chris