Thank you both for the clarification, I would say then that my water CYA is probably closer to 140ppm (I had it backwards in my post originally).
I still need to calculate the exact size of my pool, but I believe I am going to need roughly 500lbs of salt to go from 800ppm to 3500ppm. I will add it slowly to avoid overshooting though, especially since I dont know my exact gallons yet.
Some more questions......
Regarding calculating the gallons of my pool, is there a better way to get as exact as possible (other than measuring a fresh fill) beyond just measuring the pool, and entering the average depth and shape? I am going to try to do a tape measure of the depth, most pools are 8ft in the deep end, and 4ft in the shallow end, correct? My pool I noticed has a larger than normal shallow end, and then the slope is going to be different possibly and not everyone has the same corner size cut off. It's just that if I am doing pool math I would really like to have as an exact gallons as possible.
General question regarding Salt pools: I watched some videos about salt water pools and one of the videos claimed that salt pools caused the PH to always be too high, but there was lot of disagreement in the comments. the same video talked about salt water pools causing scale, which from my teachings here, is caused not by the salt but by the too high PH. If I do the TFP way of maintaining the pool using Pool Math, should I still expect to always be battling high PH? There were many who agreed that this is a battle with SWG pools and others who said if you maintain properly its not a problem.
Heater question: When I was testing out my heater for t he first time, I turned it on, the control panel activated, I set it to "Pool" and 84F and it ran for a bit. Then I came back later and saw it say the temp was 85F, even though the water was still in the 50's, then 90F, then 95F, then 100F and then I turned it off as I realized my pump timer had cut off so there was no water ciculating through the heater. Is this normal? Should the heater continue to have power with the pump not running? Is it normal for the heater (A Rheem propane heater IIRC) to just stay on and I guess it would have turned itself off shortly when it realized no flow. However, it seems like it wouldnt be good for the thing to cycle on, realize the water is getting too hot, overheat and then cycle off, over and over. Makes me feel like something isnt wired right perhaps, I would have expected the heater to loose power when the pump does the same way the SWG is going to be wired. However, perhaps the heater needs to do a shut down procedure or something so it needs to always have power? IIRC the heater has its own switch to turn on/off like the pump.
My FC has already dropped from 20 to 10 (as of 2 days ago). Do I need to be adding chlorine before my SWG is functioning? I dont know how low it will drop if I just continue to leave it. I hope to get the SWG installed this week.
Lastly, I have a lot of stains in the pool, all over the steps and all over the liner. It's kind of ruining the otherwise nice look of the pool, its mostly in the creases running the length of the pool floor, especially the ramp down to the deep end. It looks like it could be Iron but its too cold to get in there and do these tests to determine what it is yet, perhaps you can tell what they are from the pictures:
Stains in Your Pool
I tried brushing the stains but it doesnt help. I might be able to hold a trichlor puck to one of the stains on the steps because its a little higher up. I am betting its iron though since I have well water and I am sure the previous owner topped off with the hose and not deliveries.
Thanks as always.