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Salt water chlorinator time to replace?


Chuckles78

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I've just moved into our new place and it has a salt water pool.

Upon checking water levels i noticed too little or hardly any chlorine.

Upon looking at the salt cell its totally clogged up with white stuff.

The previous owners have had the pool for about 4 years, i heard thats average lifetime of a cell.

I'll attach a picture of the chlorinator box.

Should i attenpt to clean the plates or look for a new one? post-218758-14472217487118_thumb.jpg

post-218758-14472226752473_thumb.jpg

Edited by Dieter78
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As above give it a good clean in dilute acid, but first clean as much as you can by hand.Not always nessesary to replace whole unit , just plates if they are damaged.

Good luck and keep us posted,all info helps other forum users.

1part 30-33% Hydrochloric to ten parts of water should suffice any stronger and you may damage the plates.

A large amount of heat is released when strong acids are mixed with water. Adding more acid releases more heat. If you add water to acid, you form an extremely concentrated solution of acid initially. So much heat is released that the solution may boil very violently, splashing concentrated acid out of the container! If you add acid to water, the solution that forms is very dilute and the small amount of heat released is not enough to vaporize and spatter it. So Always Add Acid to water, and never the reverse.

Edited by sappersrest
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don,t let your pool guy clean it in neat acid whatever you do,not use a wire brush either There are a few step by step videos on tube how to do it.

When you put in acid it will not all come off all at once, i would estimate you will need at lease 5 or 6 attempts .

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Cleaning the plates is generally possible but if the calcium deposit is very thick it might take several hours for it to dissolve in the hydrochloric (muriatic) acid. If the plates have been buckled by the deposit, the electrode may need to be replaced. However, since PoolRite was liquidated a couple of years ago, genuine replacement electrodes may be difficult to find. Some generic copies may be available on Amazon or eBay and are certainly being offered by several pool shops in Australia.

If correctly maintained, electrodes can last for 4 years or even longer. I've known of some (Surechlor models) still in use after 8 years. The Poolrite Enduro, if I remember rightly, was supposed to reverse it's polarity to self-clean, but I may be confusing it with the Surechlor, a later model.

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