Yes, If you have a saltwater pool that is the same stuff as is normally used (sodium chloride). Or if you don't have a saltwater chlorinator it wont hurt.
The most common problem with salt not meant for pools is the additives that get put in them. The most common being the anticaking agent YPS (yellow prussiate of soda) that will clog the fins in the cell of a salt water chlorinator. Be sure it is not iodized and has less than 1% of anything like YPS. Seems like it would take an awful lot of table salt considering mine requires 325 lbs of salt!
If you have chlorine generator, it may stop working and the water will taste salty ( above 3500 PPM = parts per million). Drain about 1 ft of pool water using water pump and refill with fresh water, if you do not have any pump put a garden hose into your pool ( not close to the overlow) and turn it on. Water running out of the pool through overflow will remove excesive salt (may take several hours). Salt does not evaporate, there is no other way but to remove partialy water from your pool. Marie
if the pool has a salt system on it, too high of a concentration would shut the system down...
Yes!
Either the to much salt was added or the sensor is out of calibration or bad.
A fresh water swimming pool is a swimming pool that does not use a saltwater chlorinator. A pool that used a salt water chlorinator has salt added to it to so that a salt water chlorinator can electronically convert part of the salt into chlorine. A fresh water pool has chlorine added to it directly either manually or Automatically.
It just stays there. some is lost to the backwash , splashing, overflow and so on but the salt that is in the water stays there.
I don't think there is such a thing as a "SALTWATER POOL CLEANER". You may have a pool cleaning device that works in either a salt pool or a standard no salt pool.
This information should be obtained from the manufacturer of the saltwater chlorinater you use. it also depends on how much salt is in it now.
What is saltwater...saltwater is just water and added salt.
Two or three bags at worst.
Salt water pools
No you will not have a salt water pool. yes you will have salt water but the actual electronic plates found in a genrator converts the salt in the water to chlorine to sanitize the pool water. A: You have to have the mechanical device to produce the chlorine in a salt pool. THE SALT A MEANS TO PRODUCE CHLORINE FOR YOUR POOL!
Yes it could be. All depends on how much water is taken out of the pool by splashing
Stop adding salt to the pool and use tablets and shock when needed.
From your question it is impossible to tell. A salt-water solution can be unsaturated or saturated depending on how much salt was added.