Answer
Jun 05, 2023 - 02:39 PM
Generally speaking, it is very possible for any two salinity tests to be +/-300ppm different. Additionally, it is not generally possible for a salt chlorinator to falsely read much higher salinity than actual unless 1) the cell type setting has been changed to a "smaller" cell type than is actually installed, or 2) salt has recently been added and concentrated pockets of high salinity have been going through the cell that a higher than the overall level of salinity that is dissolved in the pool, which will typically resolve itself within 24-48 hours. Triggering a high salt alarm does not damage the unit, it simply deactivates itself to avoid other issues. You can force the system to re-check by turning to off and then back on, and wait 1-5 minutes for any error lights to turn on while it does internal tests. There is no calibration required for this model.
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