- Nov 28, 2020
- 269
- Pool Size
- 15600
- Surface
- Plaster
- Chlorine
- Salt Water Generator
- SWG Type
- CircuPool RJ-45 Plus
Thank you. Yes, With the help of my electrician friend, I located 2 and 4 as the load side and will be patching to those, and the ground to the ground bar in on of the photos.Here's the wiring diagram for the Intermatic T-104 timer (208-277 volts). Terminals 1 and 3 are Line 1 and Line 2 from the breaker. Terminals 2 and 4 are Load 1 and Load 2 to the SWG controller. Remove the black cover off the bottom of the timer to expose the terminals.
View attachment 429515
Can you confirm how you tested the current salt level?My current salt level is 2400 ppm.
Taylor K-1766. About to test again to be sure.Can you confirm how you tested the current salt level?
I run mine at 3,200 ppm and it stays happy.
I haven't heard of any issues with Morton salt.
Perfect!Taylor K-1766. About to test again to be sure.
What do you know! That 120 lbs of salt yielded me exactly 3200 as planned. One of the first times an added amount nailed the projected result. Screenshot below shows my numbers out the box. The TA and the CH I borrowed from previous readings. I will work on the CYA tomorrow. I can tweak the salt upward later as the chemistry levels stabilize and the salt fully dissolves, if it hasn't already. Is there any empirical data about time required for salt to dissolve, and dancing in your pool for 3 hours at night drinking a bottle of champagne to accelerate the absorption, because I am pretty sure that dissolved everything. The water tasted salty and it felt nice on the skin.Confirmed, same as 4 days ago: 12 drops=2400. added 120 lbs of salt and should put me around 3200 and will test from there. I held back the 4th bag, of which I was going to use 3/4.
It generally takes a day or two of pump cycles for the salt to dissolve completely. Science has shown that champagne dance parties accelerate the process by 25%-40% depending on the number of people involved.Is there any empirical data about time required for salt to dissolve, and dancing in your pool for 3 hours at night drinking a bottle of champagne to accelerate the absorption, because I am pretty sure that dissolved everything. The water tasted salty and it felt nice on the skin.
I don't think there's a truly scientific explanation. Try raising your CYA to the lower end of the range (60 ppm) and work from there based on daily FC loss.Why does the pool school recommended levels call for ideal CYA to be 70-80 for a plaster and salt pool, when it was 40-50 for my same pool before adding the SWG? The Circupool manual calls for 30-50. I am prepared to raise it, just curious what the science or thinking is behind it.
Looks like it's coming from the fitting he re-used. I think you said he used a socket-saver type tool (one that cuts the old pipe out). I haven't tried those, I've always done the torch & 2" hole saw method & never had an issue. But it certainly looks like that fitting didn't re-weld very well.Here is the leak. Can use some help on this. Does some JB Weld type epoxy putty sound like a good last ditch effort before I call in a pool guy or the Cajun Navy?