Re: Mineral sterilization vs salt water pool
See the table in this post that shows the relative kill times for chlorine vs. copper and silver ions. Basically, both copper and silver kill bacteria much more slowly than chlorine and they do not generally inactivate viruses nor protozoan oocysts. Copper alone does not kill fecal bacteria (it's best at preventing algae growth) so if metal ions are used both copper and silver should be used together to at least inhibit growth of most bacteria.
Note that these metal ions are not oxidizers so do nothing to get rid of the bather waste from your sweat and urine so you need to use an additional oxidizer for that. Also note that metal ions can stain plaster pool surfaces if their level gets too high or the pH gets too high and these levels are difficult to control.
You can read a lot more about the perils of using metal ions in the PoolSolutions article Swimming Pool Stains & Metal Ions: Copper, Silver, Iron & More.
Chlorine is both an effective disinfectant and a reasonable oxidizer and it is both inexpensive and easy to use. One just needs to be careful to not overuse stabilized chlorine products (e.g. Trichlor, Dichlor) because they increase Cyanuric Acid (CYA) that reduces chlorine's effectiveness.
15.5'x32' rectangle 16K gal IG concrete pool; 12.5% chlorinating liquid by hand; Jandy CL340 cartridge filter; Pentair Intelliflo VF pump; 8hrs; Taylor K-2006 and TFTestkits TF-100; utility water; summer: automatic; winter: automatic; ; PF:7.5
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