Re: Chlorine Stability
fcfrey,
This is an experiment so it's a bit early to tell. The way I figure, it should be more accurate than the erosion chlorinator because the technology is better and close to the same price. The pump was about $200. from Grainger. other costs were an old 6 gal bucket with lid, some scrap rubber roof material, 6 ft of wire and a plug --- Oh yes --- 2 milk crates (for now to get the pump off the ground).
Installation required drilling and tapping for a 1/4" NPT injection port that came with the pump. I placed it so it was the last piece of pipe before the return jets so it doesn't go through the solar system.
Calibration of the pump is pretty tedious since you have to measure the liquid and time how long it takes to pump it at a certain RPM. I'm building data and so far I think it pumps .07 oz per half cycle (2 lobes on the pump) so if you know the RPM you can determine the feed rate (RPM X .07 X 2). I need some more time to verify the feed rates.
Like I said in an earlier post. I test the mixture in the feed reservoir by mixing .1ml of the solution in 1L of non-chlorinated water then run an FAS-DPD test on it to determine the chlorine percentage of solution being injected. Knowing all of that and the run time I should be able to calculate the outcome before testing. The next obvious step is to put a controller (Many $$$$) on the system but for now, it is the better half twisting the knob.
27,000 Gallon, In Ground, Vinyl Liner, CAT 2000 System.
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