There is a problem with the salt test that Ben is aware of. He is working on a solution and has posted a work around here
http://www.poolforum.com/pf2/showpos...9&postcount=11
and more info here
http://www.poolforum.com/pf2/showpos...4&postcount=14
There is a problem with the salt test that Ben is aware of. He is working on a solution and has posted a work around here
http://www.poolforum.com/pf2/showpos...9&postcount=11
and more info here
http://www.poolforum.com/pf2/showpos...4&postcount=14
Retired pool store and commercial pool maintenance guy.
Thanks for the reply and links.
I did get my salt level tested yesterday (after posting) and pool store says I have 3500ppm salt. The test kit was giving me 4000 as I noted. I'll try wiping the tips as Ben suggests.
Would it be possible to dilute the reagent so it would take twice as much pool water, distilled water, and reagent to do the same test. This way the variance in drop size would not have as much effect on the results. In other words, you would count each drop (used to go from yellow to red) as 100 ppm salt instead of 200.
I realize this is an old thread but it raises a question for me. I also have the Intellichlor SWG and it always says the salt is low. In the post above, if your SWG was saying 2700 why would the pool store say 3500? The problem with mine is that the SWG won't produce chlorine if it "thinks" the salt is too low... even if it's not.
Anyone?
Jeffski,
inspect your salt cell for scale deposits. This can cause a low salt reading and no chlorine production. If there are deposits on the cell plates then follow the manufacturer's instructions for cleaning it (Usually by hosing off or by soaking in acid and water).
Retired pool store and commercial pool maintenance guy.
Cells look pristine. Too new in fact. I'm wondering if they've been working at all. I'll get the water tested today and see what the true salt level is at. This is the second Intellichlor I've had because the first one was bad. Maybe it wasn't bad, maybe the PB just didn't hook it up right. It really has never worked right since day one.
Check your salt level and if it is ok I would then contact the manufacturer of your SWG for assistance.
Retired pool store and commercial pool maintenance guy.
Also remember that the endpoint for the salt test, Taylor's anyways, is the first color change, not the second. It starts yellow, then turns milky, then turns sort of pink/red (bingo!), then turns brown. The first color change (pink) is the endpoint.
Reseller of Taylor water-testing products for Canada
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