Hi, and welcome to the forum!
I can't answer your questions about the salt, because I don't (yet) have a SWCG. However, I can tell you that most SWCGs require higher levels of CYA (around 80 ppm or so) in order for the cell to work at its most efficient, and to keep the chlorine in the water. You need to check your owner's manual to see what CYA level the manufacturer of your unit specifies. The CYA acts as "sunscreen' for your chlorine, protecting it against being consumed by the sun, and keeping it in the pool to work on nasties in your pool water. So..if you haven't added CYA, you definitely need to. As for not keeping chlorine in the pool, it could be that the sun is just eating it up too fast, or that your unit isn't working properly (you can take a sample from your return while it's running and it should give you a test result for chlorine if the unit is working), or it could be that you have an algae bloom trying to start that you just can't yet see. To identify that, you need to test for chlorine at night after the sun is off the pool, assuming your SWCG doesn't run at night, and then test again in the morning before the sun is on the pool. If you've lost more than 1 ppm chlorine in that time, then you need to shock the pool to get rid of whatever's eating your chlorine. The SWCG won't be able to shock the pool for you, even with a "superchlorinate" mode. You'll need to use another form of chlorine, preferably plain, unscented bleach.
Hope this helps...
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