I was just speaking with my customer that has the indoor Stainless Steel pool. (This is not the same pool that I spoke of last week with the massively rusted ladders and +100 ppm chlorine.) Once his pool was up and running with the SWG he quickly noticed corrosion issues with the walls and floor of the pool. He is now using pucks, and I had him add a little bit of extra CYA. The build up of CYA over time won't be an issue because he drains the pool periodically. He has not noticed any corrosion since getting rid of the SWG and switching to pucks.

I told him that I thought that high chlorine was the cause of the corrosion and that I thought that by adding some CYA and more closely monitoring chlorine levels we could avoid the corrosion while allowing him to use his SWG again. The pool is completely 316L grade Stainless and is grounded properly. When the initial corrosion happened he brought a metallurgist out to look at the problems. The metallurgist told him that 316L stainless could not handle sodium chloride in concentrations above 500 ppm. This is vastly different from everything I've read about 316L steel.

Let me know what you think.

Brad