Please note poster's location (Austria); do not post replies appropriate only to N. America.
Hi Henderik;
I don't know anything about that particular system, but I can tell you two rules that I've learned the hard way -- by bad experiences -- and seen others do the same:
1. Being a guinea pig for a manufacturer's new product rarely works out as well as you hope, and is often a disaster. When I was young and naive, "New and Improved" sounded good, and "Revolutionary new technology" sounded great. Now that I'm old and experienced, "New and improved" translates, in my mind, to "Our marketing department has found a new way to sell less for more", and "Revolutionary new technology" translates to "We have no idea if this will work in the field, but we'd like YOU to pay to test it for us."
2. After 25+ years in the pool industry, I have seen many, many products that promised to do something good to the pool water by adding "oxygen". Without exception, all of the products were failures, and most were frauds. The only term I've seen more consistently associated with fraud (other than "oxygen") is "magnets".
Stay far, far away from ANY pool product that is going to add "oxygen" to your water or use "magnets".
Ozone -- O3 instead of O2 -- is a different case.
However, I did look at the link you provide, and I didn't see anything that looked like an "oxygen generator" using "diamond electrodes". Can you identify the exact page link, for the product you are speaking about?
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