Everybody with a swimming pool knows that the price of the
canonical 3" chlorine tablets went through the roof over the past
year. We can't blame it on teh viris this time--an explosion and
damage at the Louisiana plant that makes most of the tabs was the
culprit. Supply is no longer a problem, but the price is still a
lot higher than it was a year or two ago.
Enter the solar-powered pool ionizer. I had never heard of pool
ionizers until a couple of weeks ago, while I was severely
low-energy and just caroming around the Web looking for anything
interesting. What I discovered was a whole new way to sanitize your
pool. How they work is pretty simple: A small solar array provides
a voltage across two metallic elements, a copper rod surrounded by
a steel helix that has a silver coating. The voltage creates
metallic cations. The cations kill bacteria and algae on
contact.
The device is about a foot in diameter. The drawing below shows
what's inside:
In truth, there's not a lot of there there. The one I bought was
from NoMoreGreen Technologies and is called
CopperFlo. It was $179.98 on Amazon. It comes with a
bottle of test strips to measure the ion concentration in the pool
water, plus a little brush to scrape calcium scale off the copper
electrode once in a while. No batteries, no moving parts.
I set it down on the surface of the pool, where it just drifts
around. Any reasonable light on the solar array will generate some
ions, and full Arizona sun will generate a lot of ions,
hence the test strips. I let the chlorine tablets shrink down until
there was only one tablet in one floater. The pool did not turn
green. I've dealt with green pools a time or two, and I know that
keeping the chlorine levels up is crucial. To me, seeing a sparkly
clean pool with only one tab in a floater is borderline miraculous,
especially when it's still an Arizona summer and the water is
between 86 and 88 degrees F. Supposedly you only need one sixth of
the chlorine tabs to keep the water clean as you would absent the
ionizer.
Besides the fact that in one summer it will save me enough in
chlorine tablets to pay for itself, it's a cool concept. It's only
been in the pool for twelve days. It'll be interesting to see how
it performs long-haul.