I understand your point of view - you are basically making the proposition that it's better to operate on the low margin and simply burn through cells and replace as-needed rather than take the gamble on a larger cell failing before its rated lifetime due to external factors. That is certainly one choice a pool owner can make but that choice has two distinctive features -
1. You are actually paying more for your chlorine than simply using chlorinating liquid and so the value proposition of an SWG vanishes;
2. You are requiring the pool owner to fork over large sums of money on a regular basis and that goes against the psychology of buyers in general.
It's kind of like leasing a car versus buying one - in the lease, you only pay for the part of the car that you use (sort of), then you trade it in for a new one every so many years. You endure the higher marginal cost because you'd rather not own a depreciating asset and/or you prefer to get new features. When you buy a car, the motivation is to own it for the longest period of time possible and drive it into the ground so as to maximize its utility and minimize the cost of ownership over the life of the car. Neither option is wrong but, in general, owning cars with full utilization is cheaper than leasing cars. As the old saying goes -
The least expensive option for a new car is fixing the one you already own...
We have had folks on this forum get 10 years out of their cells and it coincided nicely with the stated operational life of the unit. Most of the failures to get full life out of cell we see here on TFP are caused by operator abuse and not following TFP guidelines. And since this community is only a tiny fraction of pool owners, the vast majority of failures will likely be just that - operator and service technician abuse/misuse.
With that said, you're correct, it is highly likely that you will not get 64 years out of your cell (you probably won't live long enough to see it). But your pool has many unique features that would allow you to go with a lower rated cell if you wanted to:
- Screened in pool enclosure reduces UV loss and debris load
- High CYA (80 and above) minimizes UV loss. In my own pool (completely uncovered) high CYA reduces my UV loss to less than 1-2ppm/day
- VSP allows you to run at minimal energy cost for chlorine production
- lower pool volume
- following TFP guidelines
So, here's the homework for you - run the cell to get the FC your pool needs each and every day and keep track of run time and output. Manage your pool all the time using TFP recommended levels and techniques. Then, ask the future owner of your home and pool to report back in 65 years when they have to buy the first replacement cell
