

Tech
Talk: Turnover vs. Turnover Rate
Do you know
the difference between a "turnover" and a "turnover
rate"? They are quite different, often confused, even used
erroneously in popular pool-operator texts. A turnover is the time
it takes for a pools circulation system to handle as many
gallons as the pool holds (not all of its water; only about 40%
of it!), and the turnover rate is the number of times per day all
this happens. A six-hour turnover is equivalent to a turnover rate
of four. A two-hour turnover becomes a turnover rate of 12. So a
short turnover means a high turnover rate! If youre a pro,
you wont mix em up!
Let's look some
more at this topic:
In most states
and in Canada, standard public pools are required to turn over their
pools four times a day. This term "turnover", even when
used correctly, is a misnomer as a noun or a verb, as the implication
is that the entire pools content is run through the system
in that many hours. "I turn my pool over in five hours"
means only that in five hours the number of gallons circulated equals
the number of gallons contained in the pool.
According to
two scientists – Doctors Gage and Bidwell – and their
law of dilution, over half of the pools water during the first
so-called turnover gets nowhere near the filter. The other "half"
of the pools volume has seen the filter twice during that
time. Indeed, some "parcels" of that water went through
the system three times. Do you suppose they tagged little water
bundles and watched them flow around, or dyed them different colors?
Were told it was actually done with "calibrated"
soil additions and periodic measurements of turbidity, which apparently
is more scientific. The concept illustrated is really all we need
to know.
Looking at the
height of columns in the chart below, representing the water that
has yet to see the filter at each successive cycle, one can see
the 58% unfiltered water after that first turn. Note that at the
second turnover the filtration exposure improved from 42 to 84 percent
(16% not yet circulated), then for the third turn, 95 percent made
it with 5% still not processed. Here is where earlier pool engineers
stopped, as the point of diminishing returns appeared to have occurred.
Achieving the three cycles in a day, eight hours each, became the
design target.

Columns represent water not yet filtered.
As pool designers
and health departments became more conservative, one more step was
added - now four cycles per day - improving filtration exposure
to 98 percent. Certainly by now "diminishing returns" have been reached. This change was not without considerable cost
to new-pool owners. With the fourth turnover (now six hours long),
we have increased the size of the pipes, filters, pumps, feeders
and some operating costs by a full 25 percent and improved the filtration
by only a miniscule three!
Apparently it
was an appropriate move for the industry, as virtually all of the
health departments in the USA have made the change and now require
the six-hour rate – at least while the pool is open for use.
Separating theory from practice helps us see the real reason why
the change was wise; the scientific tests were done with just one
dose of "soil" per day, while a pool experiencing heavy
use has introductions of solid contaminants rather constantly.
And in the cases
of spas, waterslides, therapy pools and the like, with tremendous
organic and particulate loads, the dilution law is completely out
the window. Much more frequent circulation "opportunities"
for filtration and treatment are achieved by turnover times (dictated
variously with different regulatory bodies) from two hours down
to as little as 30 minutes. Forty eight times per day at 30 minutes
– thats a lot of circulation turnovers. Maybe so, but
many busy public spas are now designed for ten minute loops, and
owners of the busiest of these find filtering that steamy soup 142
times a day is barely enough! Thank goodness six hours is enough
for most public pools.
"Most",
however, doesnt mean "all". You may have read –
in PrP 10, Pumprooms are Getting Bigger – that
worldwide trends are moving towards shorter turnovers yet. (If you
didnt read it and are remotely interested, you should...)
From four hours to as quick at two hours are turnover values now
becoming design targets in Europe and the Orient. If your pool is
staggeringly loaded with swimmers and their organic gifts, you have
probably discovered that your filtration gets behind, sanitizer/oxidizer
feed cant keep up, clarity suffers and your swimmers are at
risk.
Filtration becomes
somewhat more important than it was back when we all were injecting
gas (especially if you are using bromine). If you are using serious
ozone, more turnovers give you more exposure to the enhanced oxidation
as well as to the filter. The rule is simple: If your soil removal
rate is greater than your introduction rate, then – and only
then – you will keep that sparkling pool you desire.
When you are
on a planning committee, consider faster flows, higher turnover
rates, shorter turnover times. Youll be considering better
water.
~kw
PrP 15, modified
©1997
Professional Pool Operators of America |