A salt system for up to 25000 gallons of water is about $15-$1700.00.Ozone you can put in for Ozone & venturi system around $6-700.00. Salt is a stand alone sanitizing system and ozone must be used with a sanitizing system.
The Izotope Ozone 5 Complete Mastering System will cost $279 plus taxes and shipping if ordered online. The exact cost of the shipping will depend on the distance between the warehouse and the location of the final shipment.
Sanitation is a hygienic way of promoting health by keeping humans away from hazards brought by wastes. A sanitation barrier, on the other hand, poses a hindrance to provide sanitation to those who need them. One example of this is high cost of sanitation.
Usually only cost. Equipment to make and apply ozone to match a target dose has a payback of 3 - 10 years, and doubling the ozone makes the payback centuries.Ozone does not affect hardness, will not reduce BOD (only COD), and does not provide a long-term kill necessary for, say, a water distribution system. Ozone works well as *one* of the tools of water treatment, not the only tool.
The cost of ozone treatment can vary widely depending on the type of application, the size of the area being treated, and the provider. Generally, residential ozone treatments for air or water purification can range from $100 to $500, while larger scale or industrial applications may cost thousands of dollars. It's best to consult specific service providers for accurate pricing based on individual needs.
As sanitation technology can be as simple as a hole in the ground or as complicated as to do everything for a city of millions of people the simple question - complex answer
It depends on the water source, and the contaminants in it. Spring water or RO water is dropped into bottles with 0.2 to 0.4 ppm of ozone. This just keeps the contents "sterile" until the bottle is capped, and the ozone decays back to oxygen. One community in California gets their drinking water from an underground well located in a buried ancient redwood forest... and ozone cannot treat it economically. The low tens of ppm of ozone were applied, and eventually so much oxygen ended up in the water, the carbon filters would get bound up with all the gas. To say nothing about corrosion in the distribution system from high dissolved oxygen. Ozone doses of 1 - 3 ppm are ideal (cost and payback), and other treatment methods need to be applied either before or after ozonation (adding ozone to water), to allow this much / little ozone in most surface water sources. Underground sources commonly only require filtration and/or ion exchange. Ozone is not usually required unless the ions are not fully oxidized, which is why they are found dissolved in water. Examples are iron, arsenic, and manganese. Manganese is a tricky one. Within increasing oxidation it goes from soluble (bad), to insoluble (good, can be adsorbed to something), to soluble again (bad). So ozone doses here have to be carefully applied.
AnswerAn ozone system consists of two basic components that ensure optimum performance at the lowest operating cost: 1. The ozone generation system2. The ozone management systemThe ozone generation system creates ozone gas from on-board oxygen concentrators. The ozone management system efficiently dissolves the gas into the water while ensuring that no undissolved ozone is available to off-gas in the pool equipment room or at the pool water surface. Ozone dose is automatically controlled with an oxidation reduction potential (ORP) controller/monitor maintaining proper ozone levels in the water.Together, the ozone generator and ozone management system operate in unison and are easily installed to an existing public pool as a side-stream to the pool's main filtration system. The ozone is introduced after the filtration (and heater), and before the chlorine feeder. The side-stream flow is normally 15 to 25 percent of the main flow, depending on the size and type of pool. The output of ozone is increased as the water quantity, water temperature or organic loading increases.Ozone is a safe and efficacious antimicrobial oxidizer. In public recreational water, ozone is used in conjunction with chlorine to enhance pool water clarity and quality and swimmer protection with ozone's potent and rapid oxidation of organic and inorganic compounds.Ozone is cost-effective, uses little energy, is safe for pool patrons, and helps to protect the HVAC system from structural degradation.Source: DEL Ozone Aquatics www.DELOzoneAquatics.com
When purchased online, the price of an ozone generator ranges between about $25 to about $1000. The price depends on what type of ozone generator you are looking for.
Indirect water heaters are one of the most energy efficient, low cost water heaters on the market today. It stores 40 gallons of water for the cost of $0.05 per day.
The cost of a water filtration system can vary widely depending on the type and size of the system. Basic pitcher filters can cost around $20-$50, while whole-house systems can range from $300 to several thousand dollars. It's important to consider ongoing maintenance and filter replacement costs when budgeting for a water filtration system.
Ozone for pool sanitization is most cost effective (including consumption of electrical power, some of which is still fossil fuel derived) when it is used to "reactivate" the actual sanitizer in the pool. Ozone will reactivate bromine compounds to hypobromous acid, and bromine has a lower vapor pressure than chlorine, so you can use less bromine if you add ozone, than you would ever be able to get away with for chlorine (because ozone and chlorine are not synergistic in the same way... or at all). This means less hardness change due to chemical additions... more chemical savings. There are pools that use ozone for the primary (pre-filter) and secondary (in the pool itself) sterilant. They are made from special materials (especially the pumping / filtration), take special pool coatings (regular paints fail quickly), and take a much more expensive ozone generator (both to buy and operate). Most eco-friendly of all, is not to have a private pool, but to use a community pool instead. It is safer than most public bodies of water... if the pool is well maintained.
"That just depends on whether or not you are talking about being on a {PUBLIC WATER SYSTEM}. Such as a {CITY OR COUNTY WATER SYSTEM}. I hope that this has helped you."