Flow rate has little to do with pump run time. I know that you read on the internet that a pool needs so many turnovers per day but it is somewhat of a myth. There are pools that need a couple of turnovers a day while there are others, like mine, that can get away with less than a 1/2 turnover per day. So knowing the flow rate is not really that important.My impression is that I will need to install a flow meter to get the GPM for the 1000 rpm in order to determine run time
There are two main factors for run time:
Chlorine - This most important. If you have an SWG, you need to run long enough to get enough chlorine in the pool. If you manually dose, then you need to run long enough to circulate the chlorine after adding. 30 minutes is usually enough. But either way, you need to keep the FC levels per Ben's best guess chart.
Cosmetics - This is mainly personal preference. So if you don't care that your pool has a little dirt on the bottom or floating on the top, then you can get away with less run time. However, if you are pretty anal about having a pristine pool, you will need a lot of run time. But this is purely subjective and totally up to you. There is no right answer. Splitting up the run time can also help keep things cleaner without increasing the run time.
So run time should be based only on these two factors. Most pools with single speed pumps don't need more than 4 hours of run time. However, you may need a little more when running on lower speeds which is why I suggested 6 hours. But if you are already running more than 4 hours for solar, then I doubt you need any additional run time.
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