Adding Salt to Your Pool? Don’t Make These Mistakes!
Saltwater pool startup goes smoother when you treat it like a chemistry setup, not a switch you flip. Whether you’re converting a chlorine pool to a saltwater chlorine generator or starting a brand new salt pool build, the big theme is control: control the surface cure, control the pH rise, and control how fast you change salinity. A salt cell creates chlorine but it also drives pH up through aeration inside the cell and the chemical reaction itself. That pH climb is manageable in a stable pool, but it can become a constant battle if you rush the process or begin with unbalanced water. New plaster pools need extra patience because plaster curing creates high acid demand for months, with the first 2 to 3 months being the hardest window. Starting the saltwater generator immediately stacks two problems on top of each other: curing plaster pushes you to add acid, and the salt cell pushes pH upward at the same time. The result can be persistent high pH, scaling risk, and a surface that...