Re: How to sanitize
Chlorine sanitation is the most effective way to sanitize a pool. Having said that, salt systems use salt to produce chlorine. Both are chlorine based sanitizers. With a salt system you add salt to the water (3000-4000ppm) and the "cell" breaks the salt down to produce chlorine.
If you opt to not go with a salt system, understand that household bleach (chlorox) is chemically identical to the chlorine your pool store sells. It might be a little less concentrated; walmart sells 8.25% chlorine bleach. Pool stores tend to sell 10-12%. The stuff at the pool store usually comes at a much higher cost.
Here's a good article on the subject of household bleach vs "pool store" chlorine. http://www.poolsolutions.com/gd/use-...ing-pools.html
Now, I have a salt water chlorine generator in my pool and I love it. It allows me to be lazy and only check and adjust my chemistry weekly while having a safe and clear pool. However, there is a big cost difference. If you are using household chlorine bleach you will pay far less overall for sanitizing your pool than you would with a chlorine generator. Also, if your pool has metal sides or other metal components then the salt in the salt water will contribute to corrosion. If you do go salt, make sure you peruse the pool manufacturer's warranty. Some manufacturers will not warrant the pool if you use salt.
The dealer could be discouraging because they are also hoping to have a steady revenue stream selling you chlorine. They could be worried about the warranty.
Any way you go, you will be well served by reading a little on poolsolutions.com and getting a k-1766 test kit to test the pool water yourself. Pool stores to a one are notorious for giving bad results. Sometimes they are sloppy, sometimes they lead you astray telling you to put un-necessary chemicals in your water so they can make money selling the stuff.
This page has a link where you can get a k-2006 FAS-DPD taylor test kit. http://www.poolsolutions.com/testkit-order-links.html You can search the net yourself, but the price on the one linked is pretty decent (amazon.com). Usually pool stores do not keep these in stock.
rectangle 11.5K gal IG concrete pool;; 125sf cartridge filter; 2hp 1 speed pump; K-2006, k-1766; PF:10
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