Re: UV light for sanitation
You should also understand that a pool using Cyanuric Acid (CYA aka stabilizer or conditioner) in it has a MUCH lower active chlorine level where the equivalent Free Chlorine (FC) is roughly 0.1 ppm in a pool with no CYA. Also, the UV system (and also true with most ozone systems) does absolutely nothing to algae stuck on pool surfaces that never get circulated. So you can't really lower your chlorine level to below that which kills algae.
As for chlorinated disinfection by-products, they are roughly proportional to bather load and the active chlorine level so in a residential pool they are negligible. The worst scenario is a high bather-load indoor pool such as some commercial/public pools and those are the ones that cause the most significant problems in terms of air quality. Also, the UV in sunlight will get rid of some of the chloramines (especially dichloramine) far more effectively than a UV system since the entire pool water volume is blasted by UV and the breakdown of chlorine produces hydroxyl radicals that are powerful oxidizers.
There are many, many pool owners on this and other forums who measure the limit of detection for combined chlorine (CC) at <= 0.2 ppm and furthermore quite a few members who have asthma and have no problems with their pools. In fact, the swimming is helpful to them. If you are talking about an indoor pool or one not exposed to sunlight, then that's a different story where supplemental oxidation from UV or ozone may be helpful, but it's a waste of money for an outdoor low bather-load residential pool.
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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