As I said chlorine will kill what in can in under a minute, that would be lots of different bacteria, virus's etc including algae spores so that's the job done except for chlorine resistant types, like Giardia and Cryptosporidium and oocysts which need filtering out (this depends on the filtration being good enough and may also need flocculent. Generally the pumps are too big and the filters too small to achieve great filtration, eyesight is too bad to judge.
If you filter for 2-4 hours only and that is sufficient it may of course depend on where you live and your pool is situated with tree debris etc but with the water stationary for 20-22 hours of the day anything entering will become water logged and sink. This may not effect turbidity whilst no swimmers are in the pool but swimmers and quickly the water becomes cloudy. The same with vacuuming the pool the little dust cloud that gets stirred up in front of the vac head which leaves the pool slightly less clear than before you started.
If the system is running 24/7 then the detritus gets into the skimmers not to the bottom of the pool. It seems to take barely any energy to circulate the chemicals to keep it all mixed but you do need a flow across the pool of a minimum 22 gallons per minute to make the skimmers system work (for a pool of my size 24 x 12) Jets are carefully arranged to mix the water and over a period of time the water gets clearer and clearer. OK, I am no longer using sand so the filtration is far better in terms of how fine it filters which is more important as electricity should be put to good use trapping fine particles and not recirculating them which is what happends when the pump is too large for the filter.
I have run many pools the old way and then experimented and unequivocally the water is cleaner, clearer and takes less maintenance when run 24/7 and turbidity dropped from 5 NTU's (very clear) to 0.5-10 NTU's (incredibly optically clear) AS far as I can ascertain there is nothing to be gained from short pump runs where the power is equal to 24 hour running. I am not saying you can't run short times and be happy with the result but done the other way 24/7 on very low energy (around 50watts/hour in my case but that's 39 watts over night) Not everyone could do this but even a 1/8th-1/4 hp pump would be more than sufficient for most pool filtration and just keep the old pump for vacuuming and backwash. I use a pool blaster max for the occasional leaf that misses the skimmer of the bit of dirt from after the rain.
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