Re: Paramount Clear O3 Ozone
I had a Rainbow in-line chlorinator. It came with the pool when we bought the house. It appeared to be trouble free with only occasion maintenance required. Fill it with tri-chlor tabs and let it do it's thing (feed chlorine). What I didn't realize was that tri-chol also adds stabilizer/conditioner/CYA. I couldn't figue out why I was fighting algae all the time with "good" chlorine levels. Then I found this forum. I read and learned about the relationship between proper chlorine levels and CYA. Because I was using tri-chlor exclusively, my CYA was too high and I needed corresponding chlorine level for sanitation. Look at Ben's Best Guess Chart. I also came to realize that tri-chol drives the pool's pH to be acidic. My water became agressive to my plaster finish and started to eat it! No, really.
I'd love to find a system that required as little time to maintain as the Rainbow chlorinator, but they don't exist. A SWCG is probably as close as you can get. Just so you know - I followed the methods promoted by this forum for the last 6 months. Our pool never ever looked better ( even my wife said so). Yes, I have to add bleach pretty much every day - I think it takes 2 minutes - but I now "know my pool" and it is a genuine pleasure to have. But I'm home all the time and that is a decision factor to keep in mind as CarlD points out. My Rainbow was removed months ago. (You can have it for free if you want it, along with the rest of my tri-chlor.)
A good test kit (I have the recommended Taylor K2006) is your best investment. No matter which sanitation method you choose, it will allow YOU to have control of your pool, not the pool store or anybody else.
Read read read. CarlD kinda glossed over issues with ozone system. Read about them.
Good luck.
In-ground gunite 16 x 30 13,000 gal. Full screen enclosure. 120 sq ft. Filter cartridge, 1-1/2 HP pump. Master Pools In-floor cleaner. Taylor K-2006.
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