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Thanks both for the replies. I'm not sure I'm anymore convinced of either yet though. 1. On the Salt system, it sounds like it could take several days/weeks before the water is balanced? And that's for each time you drain and fill it? That doesn't sound fun, unless I'm misunderstanding. Are you not using the hot tub for the first several days or week(s) while you sort this out? What does the initial treatment look like? Bags of salt and then incremental changes with supplemental chems? With an ozonator, do you just get it and turn on and you're in the tub the first night? 2. Mention of using ozonator *with* a freshwater or monarch silver cartridge. What's that? I thought the ozonator is simply turn on and shock daily/weekly with very light chems to balance. Is it more complex than that? What are these silver cartridges? Where do they go? How much are they? No dealer has mentioned combining ozonator with anything else yet. 3. I understand the salt system is really just converting to chlorine, but given that's the backbone of the salt system, I assume there'd be more chlorine in the water at all times causing more odor and possible irritation where the ozone system is simply using ozone alone as the backbone to sanitize the water with a little help from dichlor now and then.
I'm not sure who is telling you these things you mentioned above but the reality is the chlorine is going to do the sanitizing, plain and simple. The ozonator is a nice add to a chlorine system to help you maintain clean water IMO but it won't reduce the chems too much and make no mistake, the chlorine is the "backbone" of the system (to use your phraseology), not the ozonator! You're looking at choosing between a simple, manual chlorine system with some help from an ozonator or a salt system that creates/maintains it own chlorine level. Either system is fine but if anyone is trying to sell you on a system with the ozonator doing most of the work then they're either uneducated on hot tub water care or they're using salesmanship to tell you what they think you want to hear.
Quote from: Spatech_tuo on January 20, 2020, 04:45:21 pmI'm not sure who is telling you these things you mentioned above but the reality is the chlorine is going to do the sanitizing, plain and simple. The ozonator is a nice add to a chlorine system to help you maintain clean water IMO but it won't reduce the chems too much and make no mistake, the chlorine is the "backbone" of the system (to use your phraseology), not the ozonator! You're looking at choosing between a simple, manual chlorine system with some help from an ozonator or a salt system that creates/maintains it own chlorine level. Either system is fine but if anyone is trying to sell you on a system with the ozonator doing most of the work then they're either uneducated on hot tub water care or they're using salesmanship to tell you what they think you want to hear.Got it. My assumptions on the ozonator is based on conversations I've had with dealers and with ratchett's comments above. But I'm just learning here. If the ozonator is just a supplement to a chlorine (direct or salt derived), then it hardly seems worth adding that component at all. On the other hand, this site https://www.loveyourhottub.com/better-water-blog/salt-or-ozone/ seems to indicate an overall lower requirement for chlorine concentrations with ozone vs salt system (.5-1 PPM vs 3-5 PPM) which seems good if one is trying to avoid chlorine.
If you look at that website you will see they sell ozone systems but not salt systems. That’s most likely why they push ozone
Quote from: Hottubguy on January 20, 2020, 05:42:36 pmIf you look at that website you will see they sell ozone systems but not salt systems. That’s most likely why they push ozoneAbsolutely. Everyone's got their agenda. I'm trying to cut through that and understand the true differences.One of the best ways to do that is with math or numbers. Do you know if the chlorine concentration numbers mentioned on that site for ozone vs salt system (.5-1 PPM vs 3-5 PPM) are accurate? If so, that seems like a pretty big difference and could possibly make the difference for odor and skin sensitivities.
Whether you use ozone or salt, you should still maintain a 3-5 ppm of chlorine. When you add mineral cartridge then you can drop your chlorine to 0.5-1.0 ppm.