We are getting closer to having a pool for this summer, the plumbing, shotcrete, coping, decking, and tile are all done and now we are getting to the equipment. Our pool builder does about 100 pools a year in the area, and I have been to 10 or so of his recently completed pools. He does amazing work and I can't find a single negative review of him anywhere. He strongly suggests a Clear Water Technologies ozone system (CD-12 generator w/30 gal contact tank, oxygen concentration, gas destruct, and Aqua Fusion diffuser). He then couples that with an IPS M820 chlorine/acid feeder with ORP sensor and dual pumps. The other pool owners I've visited that have this system all rave about how there is zero chlorine in the pool and the pool contractor says SWCG used to be his go to, but he has been having a lot of problems with them lately.
The catch to all of this is the astronomical price tag for this set up (almost $20k extra). I was so put off by the price that I actually put the entire project on hold and brought in 6 other contractors that also each do 50+ pools a year, 3 local and 3 from an hour+ away. EVERY SINGLE ONE told me the same story about SWCG giving them nothing but headaches lately and that ozone systems are taking over. They all bid roughly similar systems, some CWT some Del AOP50, that were all in the $12-20k range. ... and all had either the IPS M820 or Hayward Cat 2000 ORP/PH controllers as a "supplement".
Additionally, all the research I do says most newer commercial pools use ozone systems, as do municipal water treatment facilities... but then I come here and search for "ozone" and find:
When I do the math on the cost of the ozone equipment and labor to install it, these contractors might be pocketing an extra $1,500 on the upsell - on an already $50-60k bid (yes, that is from our current state to complete - LA pool prices are outrageous). I get that $1,500 multiplied by 50+ pools a year is quite a bit of money, but is that really worth your reputation if these systems don't work? What am I missing here?
The catch to all of this is the astronomical price tag for this set up (almost $20k extra). I was so put off by the price that I actually put the entire project on hold and brought in 6 other contractors that also each do 50+ pools a year, 3 local and 3 from an hour+ away. EVERY SINGLE ONE told me the same story about SWCG giving them nothing but headaches lately and that ozone systems are taking over. They all bid roughly similar systems, some CWT some Del AOP50, that were all in the $12-20k range. ... and all had either the IPS M820 or Hayward Cat 2000 ORP/PH controllers as a "supplement".
Additionally, all the research I do says most newer commercial pools use ozone systems, as do municipal water treatment facilities... but then I come here and search for "ozone" and find:
- mknauss: "Once again - consider a SWCG. The ozone/UV device comsumes electricity and chlorine, and does little else."
- Jimrahbe: "You do not want Ozone or UV or any other magic systems that pretend to do something that they don't.. The salt cell is all you will need... I have three saltwater pools and if I built another 100 pools they would all be saltwater pools."
- Donaldson: "Ozone and UV offer zero help in outdoor residential pools. The units installed in residential pools are extremely low powered anyway so even the limited benefits they would offer are non-existent."
- Richard320: "Ozone might be handy in a commercial pool with a huge bather load, to oxidize waste -- sweat, snot, dead skin, whatever -- but bleach is already a good oxidizer, and you have to have bleach since ozone doesn't linger, so why bother?"
When I do the math on the cost of the ozone equipment and labor to install it, these contractors might be pocketing an extra $1,500 on the upsell - on an already $50-60k bid (yes, that is from our current state to complete - LA pool prices are outrageous). I get that $1,500 multiplied by 50+ pools a year is quite a bit of money, but is that really worth your reputation if these systems don't work? What am I missing here?