I'm curious about this statement in the Pool School article Water Balance for SWGs: "Starting out slightly higher (200-400 ppm) than the ideal level is recommended, since the salt level will tend to fall over time."
According to PoolMath (web version), if I run my SWG at 100% for 24 hours a day (using a T-15 cell) I'll generate generate 1.47 lbs of chlorine gas per day which will add 6.6 ppm of salt to my 22K gallon pool. Lets say I cut that in half and add 3.3 ppm of salt per day. If I'm adding a little bit of salt every day, why does Pool School say my salt level will decrease?
Salt does not evaporate with water, so I shouldn't be losing any when my pool level goes down in the summer and I refill, although I guess I would lose a tiny bit when I backwash and rinse. (I never vacuum to waste.)
(I'm assuming that PoolMath calculates chlorine gas in ounces by weight, not liquid ounces, and that the salt number is ppm, not ounces. JasonLion, is that the way it works?)
According to PoolMath (web version), if I run my SWG at 100% for 24 hours a day (using a T-15 cell) I'll generate generate 1.47 lbs of chlorine gas per day which will add 6.6 ppm of salt to my 22K gallon pool. Lets say I cut that in half and add 3.3 ppm of salt per day. If I'm adding a little bit of salt every day, why does Pool School say my salt level will decrease?
Salt does not evaporate with water, so I shouldn't be losing any when my pool level goes down in the summer and I refill, although I guess I would lose a tiny bit when I backwash and rinse. (I never vacuum to waste.)
(I'm assuming that PoolMath calculates chlorine gas in ounces by weight, not liquid ounces, and that the salt number is ppm, not ounces. JasonLion, is that the way it works?)