Without the inconvenience of manual chlorine dosing, VEVOR's salt water chlorinator systems provide reliable, automated pool cleanliness. With various cell sizes, flow rates, and control configurations to suit every pool layout, our extensive selection of salt water chlorine systems covers pool volumes ranging from small above-ground units to huge in-ground installations. VEVOR's chlorine generator salt water pool systems make it easier and more affordable to keep water clean and balanced year-round, whether you are equipping a new pool or converting an old one.
Are you sick of having to purchase, measure, and add chlorine to your pool regularly? Without the uncertainty of manual chemical dosing, a salt water chlorinator systems automatically turns dissolved pool salt into chlorine, preserving clean, balanced water. With their easy-to-install design, reliable cell performance, and compatibility with a wide range of pool sizes, VEVOR's salt water chlorination systems provide pool owners with a low-maintenance sanitation option that pays for itself in just one season.
The first step in choosing the right salt water chlorinator systems is to ensure the cell type matches your pool's piping setup and that the unit's chlorine output capacity matches the volume of water in your pool. With clearly rated units for small residential pools and large in-ground installations requiring continuous, high-output sanitation, VEVOR's portfolio fully covers this spectrum.
Each salt water chlorine generating system has a maximum pool volume rating indicating how much water it can efficiently cleanse under typical operating conditions. High-output units rated for 40,000 gallons or more are suitable for large in-ground installations. In comparison, compact models rated for pools up to 10,000 to 15,000 gallons are ideal for above-ground and smaller in-ground residential pools. VEVOR's salt water chlorinator systems are available across a wide range of pool volumes.
Effective sanitation depends on matching the chlorinator's rated output to your pool's capacity. Undersizing a unit, such as using a 15,000-gallon chlorinator on a 30,000-gallon pool, forces the system to operate continuously at full output, accelerating cell wear and causing chlorine production to repeatedly fall short of demand. Although less problematic, oversizing results in higher upfront costs and needless energy usage. To provide a comfortable output buffer that prolongs cell life and maintains sanitation consistency during high bather loads, hot weather, or heavy rainfall that dilutes chlorine concentration, VEVOR recommends choosing a saltwater chlorine system rated at least 1.5 times your actual pool volume. Every VEVOR model has its pool volume rating displayed in an easy-to-read format.
An electrochemical reaction between titanium plates coated with precious-metal oxide compounds converts dissolved salt into free chlorine in the electrolytic cell, the central working part of every salt water chlorination system. The number of plates, their surface area, and the electrical current the control unit passes through them during cell operation all affect the cell's performance. Depending on the model tier, the VEVOR chlorine generator salt water pool system line features cells with plate counts ranging from 5 to 9. Higher plate counts result in greater chlorine output capacity per cycle.
With more electrochemical reactions occurring concurrently due to a larger plate surface area, the cell may produce more chlorine per hour of operation, yet still not fully utilize its electrical output. Choosing a cell rated above your minimum demand is a wise long-term investment because operating a cell below its maximum rated current greatly prolongs the life of the precious-metal oxide coating on the plates. VEVOR provides buyers with a tangible output figure to compare against their pool's predicted daily chlorine demand, based on volume, usage frequency, and sun exposure, by publishing chlorine production rates in grams per hour for each cell model.
Both above-ground and in-ground pool layouts use salt water chlorinator systems. Still, there are significant differences in plumbing needs, flow rate requirements, and installation techniques between the two. Keeping these variations in mind, VEVOR's salt water chlorine systems come in variants that are especially suited to the lower flow rates found in above-ground pool pump systems, as well as higher-flow configurations suitable for in-ground installations with larger circulation pumps.
To ensure precise chlorine generation without causing low-flow faults, the chlorinator cell must be compatible with the lower pump flow rates and plumbing diameters used in above-ground pool systems, which are typically 1.5-inch pipe. To avoid installation incompatibilities, VEVOR's above-ground-compatible models define minimum and maximum flow rate requirements that correspond to common above-ground pump outputs. Cells and bypass pipe layouts certified for higher flow volumes are necessary for in-ground pool installations with larger-capacity pumps. Across the full spectrum of normal in-ground pump speeds and variable-flow conditions, VEVOR's in-ground-rated salt water chlorination systems maintain precise salinity sensing and chlorine output control while meeting these increased flow demands.
For all salt water chlorinator systems to work properly, the pool water must have a certain concentration of dissolved salt, usually between 2,700 and 3,400 parts per million. A salt water chlorine system feels substantially softer and less irritating than a normally chlorinated pool at equal sanitation standards, since this concentration range is well below the threshold detectable by taste or skin sensation.
The salinity sensors in VEVOR's salt water chlorine generating systems monitor the salt content of the pool water and notify the user when levels deviate from the ideal operating range. The two most frequent salt-related performance problems, low salt concentration leading to inadequate chlorine generation and excessively high salt levels hastening cell plate corrosion and gradually deteriorating the control board, are avoided by this real-time monitoring. To determine the initial salt addition quantity when commissioning a new VEVOR salt water chlorinator system, multiply the pool volume in gallons by the intended PPM and convert to pounds. VEVOR offers instructions on this calculation in their product documentation. The most crucial water chemistry practice for optimizing the functionality and lifespan of any chlorine generator salt water pool system is maintaining the right salt concentration.
Beyond pool compatibility, a saltwater chlorinator system's practical value lies in how easily it integrates into an existing pool circulation system and in the level of automated control it provides once operating. With feature sets designed to reduce the daily administrative strain on pool owners, VEVOR's systems are simple to install in-line.
Using an inline installation method, VEVOR's salt water chlorination systems plumbed the electrolytic cell straight into the pool's return line, between the filter and the pool return jets. This way, every pump cycle passes through the cell and receives chlorine treatment. A skilled do-it-yourself installer can usually finish this inline arrangement in one to two hours using simple plumbing equipment and does not require any bypass plumbing complexity on normal single-pump pool systems.
The VEVOR system's conventional union fittings connect the cell housing to the existing PVC piping, enabling tool-free cell removal for cleaning or inspection without affecting the nearby pipe connections. The control unit attaches to the cell using a low-voltage connection and mounts on a wall or equipment panel next to the pool equipment pad. Written for non-specialist installations, VEVOR's wiring and connection instructions include step-by-step illustrations that are easy to understand and cover every phase of the procedure, from plumbing integration to first startup and salt addition. Regardless of the current plumbing layout, VEVOR also provides adapter-fitting compatibility information for above-ground pools with non-standard plumbing, ensuring seamless integration.
A salt water chlorine system's control unit is its operating brain, and the functions it provides dictate how much active management the pool owner must perform each day. Digital salinity readouts, flow detection indicators, self-cleaning cycle programming, and customizable chlorine output settings are features of VEVOR's control panels for saltwater chlorinators that automate most standard system maintenance tasks.
To remove calcium and mineral buildup, which is the main cause of reduced cell efficiency in hard-water areas, the self-cleaning cell technology in VEVOR's mid-range and higher models regularly changes the electrical charge on the cell plates. Compared to fixed-polarity cells, this automated reversal greatly extends the cleaning interval, reducing the frequency of manual acid washing required to sustain full cell output. Simultaneously monitoring salinity, water temperature, flow rate, and cell condition, diagnostic alarm systems provide fault codes on the control panel when any of these parameters deviate from the permitted operating range. Instead of finding a problem only after water clarity or test results worsen, these notifications enable pool owners to detect and address problems early - before a sanitation gap emerges. VEVOR's salt water chlorinator systems are truly low-maintenance pool sanitation options thanks to these advantages combined.
To reduce the daily demands of pool maintenance, VEVOR salt water chlorinator systems combine precise pool volume matching, long-lasting multi-plate cells, simple inline installation, and sophisticated control panels with self-cleaning and diagnostic features. VEVOR makes the transition to saltwater sanitation easy and affordable with models that fit pools with capacities ranging from 10,000 to 40,000 gallons or more, low pricing, and dependable after-sales service. Enjoy cleaner, gentler pool water throughout the season by perusing VEVOR's extensive selection of salt water chlorine systems.
The amount of salt you use depends on your pool size and desired PPM, which is usually 2,700–3,400. Each system includes VEVOR's provided instructions for adding salt. It usually takes between 500 and 530 pounds of pool-grade salt to fill a 20,000-gallon pool from zero.
Yes, under typical circumstances. Using dissolved salt, the chlorine generator salt water pool system automatically generates all the chlorine needed. Sometimes, after a prolonged shutdown period, large bather loads, or heavy rain, additional chlorine may be required to quickly raise chlorine levels.
VEVOR cell plates normally last 3 to 5 years when salt levels are appropriate and self-cleaning cycles are frequent. Maximizing cell service life mostly depends on avoiding extremely high salt concentrations and operating the system within its rated pool volume range.
Indeed. Union fittings and common plumbing tools are required for the do-it-yourself inline installation of VEVOR systems. The majority of installations take 1 to 2 hours to complete. Standard single-pump systems do not require a specialized pool technician; a basic understanding of plumbing is enough.
Compared to conventionally dosed pools, saltwater pools with proper salt and chlorine levels are typically gentler on the skin and eyes. This feature reduces irritation and the strong chlorine odor associated with traditional pool sanitation, as it produces less combined chlorine and prevents chloramine buildup, which is prevalent in manually dosed pools.