I had a cart for 3 years in an Intex donut, then a sand filter in my current pool for the last 12 years.
Sand filters are probably the easiest filters to maintain.
First, your sand filter should have a noticeably greater capacity than the pump. I have a 200 lb sand filter and a 1HP Hayward SuperPump and the filter is barely adequate. A 250# filter would have been better. Luckily, I have a 2 speed version of the pump and it works better on low speed. (get a 2 speed or VS pump). The slower your flow rate, the better the filter works.
Second, TECHNICALLY, a sand filter doesn't have as fine a filtering as either DE or a cart filter. But that can easily and CHEAPLY compensated for by using skimmer socks and adding a little DE (like 1/3 cup) to your filter after you backwash. Less than $10 worth of DE powder has lasted me over 3 years now...and $10 of skimmer socks should see you through a season. Both help your sand filter do its job.
Third, you backwash when your pump pressure increases by about 5psi. If you pre-plumb it into a drain, you merely turn the pump off, swing the multi-valve lever to backwash and run it till the water in the sight glass runs clear. Then turn it back to filter. Simple. Usually takes less than 5 minutes every few weeks.
Fourth, unless you add something really bad to your pool (nothing WE would suggest), you NEVER have to change the sand in your filter. As the sand gets older and "dirtier", it actually filters BETTER than new sand. It's because the wear and the locked-in dirt REDUCES the size of the spaces in the sand, catching more stuff.
My water is crystal clear, and so is that of most of our sand filter owners. Old sand, DE, big enough filter for the pump, skimmer socks and you'll get GREAT performance!
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