New Here. Going to Salt???
I've been a slave to the pool store for three years. I have a 29,000 gallon inground pool. Im using Nature 2 . I like the idea of the salt system keeping a steady chlorine level but the cost upfront is going to hurt a little. I am looking at the Zodiak Jandy Aqua Pure Ei. Im not finding a ton of info on them good or bad. Please go easy Ive got lots of questions. Thanks
Re: New Here. Going to Salt???
I don't know about the Zodiak but someone will. Just wanted to say hi and welcome you to the forum! I will tell you this --- we don't care much for the Nature 2 system. It adds copper to the water. Contrary to popular belief, it isn't chlorine that turns hair, fingernails and pools green, it is copper!
Re: New Here. Going to Salt???
Not a fan of Zodiac SWCGs ( or Zodiac in general, customer service leave a bit to be desired). Check out Hayward/Goldine Aqua-Rite/AquaLogic, Pool Pilot (Autopilot Systems), WaterMaid, and Pentair Intellichlor.
Re: New Here. Going to Salt???
Thanks for the reply. The only reason I was looking at the Zodiak was ease of installation, but after some reading they all look pretty staightforward. What is the average lifespan of these units? I'm trying to justify spending a grand or more. Thanks, Sarge
Re: New Here. Going to Salt???
The controllers should last quit a while but I understand the cells typically last 5-7 years.. Mine is 6 years old.
Re: New Here. Going to Salt???
I think that will depend on what size you get and what run percentage you end up using. i.e. if you get a 25k gallon swcg, you'd probably have to run it at 100% and have a shorter lifespan of the cell. If you got the 40k gallon sized cell you could run it at a lower setting and it would last longer.
Re: New Here. Going to Salt???
There's another thread around here where someone was discussing installing a light controller indoors, you might search for that. The swcg controller that I've got has a transformer in the control box and puts out a good amount of heat. Here in Florida, air conditioning is both required almost year round and expensive on the electric bill. Personally, I wouldn't want the controller inside my house for that reason. If you've got a pool house/shed, that might be a good spot to mount it. As you're thinking, keeping the stuff out of the elements should prolong the lifespan. I've been thinking of constructing some sort of enclosure around the pads all my stuff is sitting on for that reason.
Re: New Here. Going to Salt???
I've got the Jandy SWCG, but the older model, not the Ei model. My pool builder strongly suggested NOT using the Ei model, as they had had unsatisfactory results from installing that model in new pools, and so they switched back to installing the older model (the non-Ei model) for new installations. Apparently they're not getting any warranty claims for the older Jandy model. I could have pressed the issue and gotten the Ei, but I don't build pools for a living, so I went with his suggestion. So far, it works great (but I'm only 8 weeks into pool ownership, and only 4 weeks into salt chlorination). The salinity read-out various a bit sometimes when I press the button multiple times, but then, the salinity results from the two pool companies I'm taking water samples to read differently than each other, too. Between the SWCG and the two independent test results I'm getting each week, I can generally tell whether my salt level is at the optimal range. The SWCG tends to read a little higher than the two pool companies that give me test results for my pool.
In my 16,000 gallon pool, the SWCG was able to bump up my free chlorine from 1.5 to 12.5 after running it in the Boost mode (24 hours, non-stop).
Re: New Here. Going to Salt???
One other thought. The Jandy user manual says the controller is supposed to be installed a minimum of 5' off the ground. The electrian who installed my Jandy SWCG put the controller only 3' off the ground. Not sure why that matters, really, except that being lower to the ground, there's a greater chance of having rain water hit the controller, or having my lawn's sprinkler system hit the controller. When you have them do the install, be sure to tell them you want the controller installed 5' off the ground.