

CONTROLLER CONCEPTS III
We’ve talked in this column about
the critical nature of feed-system sizing so a pool controller
can actually control, and the importance of a representative
and responsive sample for that controller. Now we should
decide what’s worth tying to today’s smart electronic automation
devices and what’s probably not.
If one must summarize the
answer to that opening query in a single sentence, he’d
have to say “control everything that moves quickly; skip
everything that doesn’t.”
We wouldn’t focus so much
on pH if it didn’t migrate up or down so fast, would we?
If our sanitizer didn’t move so rapidly towards zero, we’d
probably not bother hanging its feeder on a few thousand
dollars’ worth of electronics. Not only do we control these
two standard variables because of their rate of movement,
we do so because they are critical.
So maybe we should add “critical in nature” to our requirement
list for automation. Let’s list all the things we might
automate in the pool, then look at each one. In the list
we can take a stab at typical units of time within which
one might expect to measure significant changes, then show
the minimum-value change (one that we might want to correct)
that applies to each:
ORP,
chlorine/bromine |
minutes
or hours |
10
mV |
[PPM,
chlorine/bromine |
minutes
or hours |
.5
ppm |
pH |
hours |
.1
pH unit, up or down |
Calcium
Hardnesse |
weeks
or months |
50
ppm |
Total
Alkalinity |
weeks |
20
ppm |
Total
Dissolved Solids |
months |
indefinite;
many thousands of ppm |
Temperature |
hours |
1
to 2 deg. F. |
Flow |
days |
gpm,
10% of total |
Filter
backwash |
days
of weeks |
psi,
specific differential |
Pool
water level |
hours |
one-quarter
inch, threshold set |
Air
temp and humidity |
hours |
3
deg. F, 5% |
Superchlorination |
as
needed, or cyclic |
n/a |
Acid
flush of electrodes |
as
needed, or cyclic |
n/a |
It’s clear from this list, whether your
pool conforms to these common ranges and rates or not,
that the only variables screaming for control are ORP,
pH, temperature, pool-water level and air handling. And
only the classic first two relate to water chemistry!
Examining the five fast movers in reverse order, we find that air handling
is performed by stand-alone air systems, simple to complex ? yet never so far
built into the “pool controller”. In high-end, newer indoor-pool-enclosure systems,
a building-wide or campus/complex-wide central station ? run by facilities maintenance,
not the pool operator ? usually manages natatorium air. The likelihood of pool
systems being tied into these central systems is far greater than the opposite
? the case where “air” might be included in the pool-water controller. For outdoor
pools... well, you know who has control over air handling there!
Water level is controlled in every way imaginable, from float valves, solenoids
controlled by probes or infra-red beams, Clayton valves... right on down to diligent
operators with garden hoses. In every case, however, there seems no need to attempt
electronic control of water level from the water-chemistry control center, no
matter how sophisticated it may be. Levels are never recorded; and additions
are triggered simply to replenish physical losses back to the desired elevation.
Even summations of water use over long periods are done the old-fashioned way,
by a totalizing water meter. You won’t ever find make up water on your pool controller.
Pool water temperature is virtually always controlled by a thermostat ?
integral to any installed heater, old or new. Temperature data may be gathered
and archived by a central system at the maintenance office, but control is left
with the heater system provided by the respective manufacturer. It doesn’t make
much sense to locate a thermostatic control anywhere else, duplicating the integral
one. We do find multi-channel, data managing pool controllers asked to keep records
of temperature readings, system-on times, even energy consumption if there is
no “facility central”. Remote control of temperature, on the other hand, may
be infringing on the heater manufacturer’s design. Since he would have no control
over the quality of that temperature management, partial voiding of the warrantee
is likely!
Now we’re getting to the important stuff.
ORP, that qualitative oxidation/reduction potential developed by residuals
of chlorine or bromine, is so fleeting it is a must for automation.
In smaller, high-load bodies of water ? like public spas, therapy pools and wading
pools ? sanitizer residuals can dive to zero in minutes. This is of such concern
that health departments across the country are beginning to add ORP minimums
and, in a few states already, ORP controllers are required, set to their guidelines
and/or codes for all public aquatic vessels. ORP, as discussed thoroughly in PrP Issues
5 and 6, is the variable managed by every major pool-water control system made
in the world today. ORP, (sometimes called HRR, high-resolution REDOX,) should
be found on the face panel of your controller, now and in the future.
Chlorine or Bromine PPM control is performed in a back-door fashion on some
controllers in an attempt to simplify the display for un-initiated observers
(some health inspectors, maybe?) as well as to enhance competitive featureship.
Very, very few controllers truly read quantitative residuals (ppm); most actually
read ORP. Some controller companies simply over-print meter faces with PPM numbers,
almost never accurate or consistent. Others make calculated approximations for
the readout, equally unreliable. A few high-end controllers offer PPM control
as an option to HRR/ORP, using sophisticated PPM probes. Don’t use it as your
control choice; PPM control, indeed digital PPM readout, invites criticism of
the machine as too many variables bear on the readout to allow constant accuracy.
pH control is actually more important than chlorine/ORP control. What? Read
it carefully... “control” is the key word. The presence of chlorine
is all-important; however the actual chlorine value, to be precisely controlled,
is not as critical as pH. As you know, it's pH that determines both how effective
the chlorine will be and if your pool is going to be intact next year
as well! So careful, moment-by-moment management of pH could be considered the
most important variable of all. In better controllers you’ll find that extremes
are tied to alarms and to the sanitizer feed system itself ? an important feature.
Too high or too low? Not only does the pH alarm activate but the sanitizer ?
usually the cause for the un-corrected pH shift ? is locked out as well!
Now on to the whistles-and-bells variables many of which, we will show,
aren’t worth the pretense of automation:
"Automated superchlorination” is, frankly, a joke ? a result of consumer
demand. If you can’t electronically read the values and the ratio of ammonia
compounds to active halide (and you ? the controller, that is ? can not. Our
machines read results, not the literal chemical content of water. It can’t, therefore,
can’t calculate a dosage or residual required to reach breakpoint. Manual override
with full-output sanitizer feed for a specified number of hours is not automation.
These overfeed periods usually are of little value ? ineffective, unnecessary
and wasteful. Maybe we could make a machine responsive to kids' complaints, or
to levels of chloramine odor...!
Total Dissolved Solids, that mystified and maligned variable blamed for
so much that's otherwise unexplainable, is ridiculous to “automate”. First of
all, even if it were important, TDS can’t be read accurately. Meters use conductivity
as a crude approximation ? good enough for a pool-guy's purposes but by no means
precise. Second, TDS is so “total” in nature that one cannot easily determine
what miniscule portion of it’s content may qualify water to require dumping or
dilution. Almost always, TDS is harmless and does not need reduction (see “What’s
All This Fuss Over TDS:, PrP #1 or the updated version on the PPOA’s Internet
home page: www.ppoa.org). The classic concern is over the "salty taste" complaints,
and if you can’t handle that one with a little psychology then you deserve to
waste all that water! Finally, TDS moves too slowly to bother spending money
on its control. This is a classic case of un-necessary technology following inaccurate
science.
Electrode acid flush, if needed, is so simple we might as well do it with
a time clock within the controller. In this case, we could call such switching "automation".
Calcium Hardness moves quite slowly so doesn't need automation. That's handy,
because CH can't be read with a sensor anyway. Monthly hand corrections are simple
and usually quite adequate. It's the presence of plenty of calcium hardness that
is important, not the precise value.
Automation of Total Alkalinity, tried by a controller company in the 70s,
is almost impossible and simply not necessary. No variable easily read by instrumentation,
like conductivity for example, is adequately proportional to TA. Hand tests are
important, on a timely basis determined by the rate of change, followed by manual
adjustment. Better than being a slave to frequent hand-dosing of bicarb or acid,
however, one can spend some time evaluating the sanitizer influences choices
and influences, thus greatly reducing the TA drift.
That's about it for our expanded view of automation potential. After all
this conversation, it pretty well boils down to the need for a machine that controls
the ol' standard two and does it really well. Rather than "automating" dubious,
spec-motivated variables, top machines should focus on offering: 1. Computerized
remote access and control by phone or remote station. 2. Voice, beeper or fax
call-out alarms for everything from un-expected extremes, excess feed duration,
flow failure, even to out-of-code-compliance conditions. 3. Excellent and detailed
records management, archiving and display, with complete event data as well as
value data. 4. Capability for serious analysis ? of water chemistry, equipment
set-up, system function, and system operation ? allowing the reported data to
become a valuable management tool.
There is one, final variable we haven't talked
about, and it might be the most important of all ? quality Operator Training!
As technology improves and becomes more available we learn more about a pool's
maintenance needs. Equipment and systems are becoming more sophisticated as well.
Pool owners then demand more of operations staff...A problem pool almost always
has a problem operator; he may be well intended, but not well enough trained
to deal with today's controllers, today's stiff requirements and today's risks.
Current trends with the state health departments show us moving towards certification
requirements for one or sometimes all operators assigned to any public pool.
Someday, we may see periodic currency evaluations or even licensing. In the bigger
picture, a pool guy is part of the "automation
system". There's no buttons to push to fix an operator who needs experience
and knowledge; she or he's got to go out and get trained. So stay current, renew
your certification, and seek out advanced courses when available. It's your pool
and your job we're talking about!
Finally, a controller's "start-up training" is about as critical
as the operator's certification, and he often is shortchanged. A controller in
a box with a book is pretty worthless, yet many are sold that way. When shopping
for a controller, an important part of the system's evaluation must be a review
of what the owner receives in equipment training. Don't overlook it.
~
kw
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