cschnurr
It takes mine about 20 to 30 minutes to raise. I get a 2 to 3 psi per 1 and a quarter cups. The de does work but I have noted it takes a few days to really notice the diffrence.
Steve
cschnurr
It takes mine about 20 to 30 minutes to raise. I get a 2 to 3 psi per 1 and a quarter cups. The de does work but I have noted it takes a few days to really notice the diffrence.
Steve
cschnurr...Carl,
What was the stuff they sold that is supposed to be better than DE? Just curious. All I know is the approximate time for the presssure to stabilize when adding DE. The amount you add to get the target 1 psi rise is also very dependant on the filter size.
Al
It's this new stuff that folks have written about that's some sort of DE substitute that's less dangerous to breathe. Some sort of fibrous stuff. I have NO idea how it works, or how well it works, but it's supposed to be OK to use with a cart filter, unlike real DE.
Carl
There are two kinds of DE replacements...One is cellulose fiber and the other is perlite, a type of volcanic rock. I have no info on the filtering ability of either as to how small they will filter. I know the cellulose one can be used with cartridge filters since it doesn't clog the reemay polyester filter material. The perlite is still a silceous (glass) rock so it still might be dangerous to inhale. don't really know.
Retired pool store and commercial pool maintenance guy.
The stuff I was sold sounds like the cellulose material Waterbear mentioned.
It had a generic name like "DE filter additive". Instructions stated for DE filters or sand filter additive, and also stated it was 5x the efficiency of DE. It was off-white in colour and extremely lightweight.
It was $13 Cdn, for about 3-4 cups.
My question to the pool store where I purchased it was if it is 5x DE, how can so little of it spread entirely across the filter. She didn't know.
Carl Schnurr
96,000 litre inground, vinyl liner, 1 HP 1speed pump, sand filter, SWG, installed 2005.
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