The store where you bought the salt system can probably tell you how much. It all depends on how big, and thus how much water is in your pool. If you tell them the size and depth of the pool they should be able to tell you about how much salt you'll need to add.
To fill up a 12 foot swimming pool, you would need approximately 6,900 gallons of water.
Our 20 x 40 with a shallow & deep end needs 10 to 12 bags @ 40lbs. each at the start of each season to reach the correct ppm for our chlorine generator. I'd start with 6 and have two more handy. Y ou will need them after a heavy rain anyway... Jim
Firstly, do you have a salt generator which will product chlorine? If not, then NONE!
This depends largely on how much use it gets or how much dust and impurity's are blown or dropped into the pool. if you have a salt water pool then you have to run it long enough to generate enough chlorine to keep the chlorine up. If it is an ordinary fresh water pool then usually some where between 6 and 8 hours per day on average.
Depends on the depth and the material it is made from.
Approximately 12 gm
Yes you should run your pool at least 12 hours a day.
You have a Large Pipe that connects to 12 Funnel Shaped Tanks and the pool. The Tanks would be made out of Stainless Steel and are 5 Feet Tall with Metal Doors that fit on the Tanks. In Order to Create a Wave Pool You Need to make the Water Leave the 12 Funnel Shaped Tanks and open the Metal Doors using a Lever to Flush the Water and Dump it into the Pool in Under 1 Second. You would need to have 4000Kg of Water with Salt in it and put equal amounts of water into each 12 Funnel Shaped Tanks.
7 dollars for kids 12 for adults
A gunite pool can be freestanding and does not need earth around it as additional support. The construction of the pool is more involved with generally a thickness increase from 8" to 12" along with the addition of a secondary grid of steel in the pool. The engineering drawings for the pool will cover these additional details of construction.
Caring for green saltwater pool.Very simple. I have just done this a week ago. 1. Shock the pool and leave for a couple of days. Yes, you CAN do this. (By the time you are ready to use these pool chemicals will have dissapeared)2. When green starts to clear up, allow the water to go through filtering system with chlorinator switched off. (As you have shocked the pool there is no need for this to be on). I ran this for about 12 hours. You need to keep an eye on the filter. I had to clean (backwash) my sand filter often in these 12 hours. 3. When you are happy with the clarity of the water, run system as you normally would. My pool is pristine.