salt water does provide a lower degree of freezing temperature but the normal amount in a salt water pool is so low that the answer is "not enough to make a difference". Protect your pool and equipment from freezing as you would if it weren't a salt water pool
Water freezes at 32 degrees Fahrenheit (which is 0 degrees Celsius). The factors which might change the temperature at which your pool pipes may freeze are: - other materials (such as salt) which are dissolved in the water - the rate of flow (if any) of the water through the pipes - the pipe diameter - the insulating properties of the pipes themselves - whether the pipes are buried underground Good luck with your pool!
You need to dilute or change the water only when one or both of those levels exceed desired levels. There is no regular schedule for this, as the levels and their increase rate will vary from pool to pool. Get reliable test equipment and test the water yourself periodically, or take a fresh sample of water in to your local pool store to have the levels checked.
they both freeze the same rate
Water takes longer
the rate that water is coming into the pool, is the amount of water in the pool (x) divided by the amount of time it take to fill the pool. x / 10 the rate to empty the pool is x / 15 the rate to fill the pool wile it is being emptied, is the rate filling the pool minus the rate emptying the pool. x / 10 - x / 15 simplified 3x / 30 - 2x / 30 this gives x / 30 divide the rate the pool is filling, by the amount of water. (x / 30) / x this gives a time of 30 hours to fill the pool.
To calculate the evaporation rate of your swimming pool, you can use a simple formula: Evaporation Rate = (Pool surface area) x (Evaporation rate factor) x (Temperature difference). Measure the surface area of your pool, find the evaporation rate factor for your area, and determine the temperature difference between the pool water and the air. Multiply these values to calculate the evaporation rate.
This is not a complete question or even a statement
Tap Water because adding substances to the water (salt or sugar) reduce the rate at which water will form ice crystals, making it freeze at a lower temperature.
The freezing rate can be calculated by dividing the amount of substance frozen by the time it takes to freeze. For example, if 200 grams of water freeze in 10 minutes, the freezing rate would be 20 grams per minute.
No Pool water evaporates in one day or one week
Yes, moving water typically freezes at a slower rate than still water due to the constant motion preventing the formation of ice crystals.
Yes, salt lowers the freezing point of water (makes it take longer to freeze)