ioniser for swimming pool

D

Dirk Snoeken

Guest
Is there anyone who van provide me with the schematics of a pool ioniser?

Thanks in advance.

Dirk
 
"Dirk Snoeken" <snoeken@tiscali.nl> wrote in message
news:4085a4c2$0$41750$5fc3050@dreader2.news.tiscali.nl...
Is there anyone who van provide me with the schematics of a pool ioniser?
Peter Brock may have some car ionisers still - maybe you could adapt one of
them.

What benefit is a pool ioniser (seriously)?

WR
 
Dirk Snoeken wrote:

Is there anyone who van provide me with the schematics of a pool ioniser?

Thanks in advance.

Dirk
Do you maen ionising O2 into ozone? That's used instead of chlorine to kill
bacteria.

gtoomey
 
Dirk Snoeken wrote:
Is there anyone who van provide me with the schematics of a pool ioniser?
Simple ones are just a high-current low (adjustable) voltage DC power
supply with an ammeter and a timeclock. st like 4-12 volts at 20 amps.
For Dirk's benefit, the objective is to feed an electrolysis cell which
is probably titanium or platinum plated, to generate free chlorine from
common salt dissolved in the pool.
 
Thats still a chlorinator though isnt it?
I would have thought an ioniser to be creating ozone instead of
hyrerchlorite.
if its a chlorinator schematic you seek the general arrangement on my
chlorinator has a voltage controlled primary on a 9v 20VA transformer. power
is rectified through a bridge rectifier then driven through titanium plates
as already mentioned.
there is an ammeter to give a 'scale' of output and a pot to controll the
primary TX voltage.
Cheers
Wayno
"Clifford Heath" <cjh-nospam@nospaManagesoft.com> wrote in message
news:1082509791.819336@excalibur.osa.com.au...
Dirk Snoeken wrote:
Is there anyone who van provide me with the schematics of a pool
ioniser?

Simple ones are just a high-current low (adjustable) voltage DC power
supply with an ammeter and a timeclock. st like 4-12 volts at 20 amps.
For Dirk's benefit, the objective is to feed an electrolysis cell which
is probably titanium or platinum plated, to generate free chlorine from
common salt dissolved in the pool.
 
#HISH wrote:
Thats still a chlorinator though isnt it?
Oh, true. I didn't think the copper/silver electrode type was in
favour any more (toxicity). Apparently that's disputed now though
(e.g. http://www.aquamatics.com.au). They were fairly effective,
and require much less current than the solt chlorinators. They
need polarity reversal every 2 minutes. The rest is much as I
said previously.
 

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