It all depends on your pool. The amount of water is a factor as well as the amount of chlorine your pool need based on bather load and other factors. You should start low and frequently test your water while increasing the production until the chlorine level is correct. You should not need anywhere near full capacity unless you have an extremely large pool or a lot of swimmers. I'd suggest starting at 20% for a day, testing your water and adjust from there.
Chlorine can bind with the same receptors as iodine, blocking the production of thyroid hormones in the thyroid gland.
A salt system makes chlorine, that's what its there for.
ionisation system stay in water whereas chlorine evaporate into the air, Chlorine irritates the skin, the eyes, and the respiratory system.
Don't be confused, all a salt system does is perpetually produce chlorine, you still have chlorine in your pool. The advantage is you don't have to go to the pool shop and buy chlorine to add on a regular basis. And if you think about the chlorine level when you, on a weekly basis, add 10L of chlorine. When you do that the chlorine level spikes then fades away until next time. That spike is hard on every part of your pool. With a salt system there is no large spike as it's making little bits of chlorine every few minutes. What you have to be cautious about with a salt system is that it's not maintenance free. You still have to make sure the rest of your water chemistry is on par. AND you can't just put the system on, set it to 100% and walk away. In most cases you can set the system to 20-30% production and that is more then enough!
You first have to convert the pool to a chlorine system As a salt water system is a chlorine system.
what is production system
It may not be chlorine but by-products from the reaction between the chlorine & organic materials introduced into the water, especially perspiration & urine. It is these by-products that irritate the eyes & skin. If it is chlorine you are probably over-dosing the pool, but I'd also verify the pH and alkalinity before you correct the disinfectant.
Depends on your dosing system. It shouldn't matter the size as long as you maintain the correct ppm free chlorine normally between 1.5ppm and 2.0ppm with a pH of 7.4ppm
continuous production system
A salt system IS a chlorine system. Chlorine is still the sanitizer. The salt system is there so a chlorine generator can make the chlorine from the salt instead of you having to deal with it. There is no such thing as "best", only tradeoffs. A salt system is expensive even if you break it down per year (with initial and replacement costs). However much less maintenance. A salt system IS perfectly safe for a vinyl, or any type, pool.
in catering the production system is the process of cooking.
Depending on the flow characteristics, there are four classes of the production system. 1.Mass production or flow line production system. 2.Batch production system. 3.Job shop. 4.Projects