Robby,
You have a lot of great questions and I'm sure EVERYONE here will do everything they can to give you the best advice they can. I can only talk about a few things--what I know about.
I'd estimate your volume at just under 90,000 gallons figuring that with a 5.5' depth you only actually have 5' of water.
I would guess--and it's STRICTLY a WAG, that you'd need two 300lb sand filters (I can never keep straight the " to lb conversion) and two 2hp full-rated pumps--one for each filter. But that's just my WAG. Better people than me can give you better recs.
I'm not sure how to repair the pool. You may be able to chisel out the crack and fill it with pool epoxy--you are painting over it. I can't help you on the paint questions.
As for Salt Water Generation vs chlorine. BOTH are chlorine pools. Salt is Sodium Chloride and the system cracks the salt to create free chlorine in lower, but very constant levels. Not sure of the chemistry, but the combined chlorine (the used-up stuff) recombines with sodium to make salt. In THEORY, your salt level stays the same.
However, these systems are pretty expensive considering how big your pool is--about 4-6 times the size of most of our owners' pools, and double the very biggest. (My own is about 20,000 gallons).
But you should have plenty of access to liquid chlorine over there. LC is just like bleach only about twice as strong. It's usually rated at 12% but when I test it it's usually more like 14-14.5%. What this means is that you'd need about 9 gallons of ordinary regular laundry bleach (no sudsing, gel, or perfumes) to get a free chlorine level of 5.25 parts per million 9 gallons of Ultra bleach would get you a level of 6ppm--generally good, clean water. But you could get the same level from 4 to 4.5 gallons of LC, and it's sold in 5 gallon carboys most places.
A 5 gallon drum here is now between $18 and $20, so how many gallons would a properly sized SWG system cost you? Say it's $4000--that's 200 5-gallon carboys of LC. Say you use a carboy a week (reasonable, once you have regular maintenance going). If your location is in one of the two hot zones our nation is now engaged in, you probably have winter time and can swim for, say, 4-5 months a year. So...say it's 25 weeks/year. That means your 200 carboys may last 8 years. In other words, by MY very, very rough estimate, it's going to take years to re-coup the cost of the SWG. I'm guessing about a lot of these numbers, and the amount of usage can vary (Make sure NOBODY swims without showering first and your chlorine will last a lot longer). But it's a ball-park guess.
Again, others will surely weigh in to improve on my estimates, but I'm pretty good at rule-of-thumb calculations on chlorine:
1 gallon of 5.25% bleach will create 5.25 ppm of chlorine in 10,000 gallons of water.
1 gallon of 6% ultra bleach will create 6ppm in 10,000 gallons.
You need 2 gallons of either to create the same level in 20,000 gallons.
And you'll need 9 gallons to create the same level in 90,000 gallons.
Since LC is about twice as strong as Ultra bleach, you'll need half as much.
Good Luck and thank you for your service to all of us.
Carl
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