Why did Disney make that one pool at the Poly salt water? Is a salt water pool better? Nicer? Pros vs. Cons?
It's the newest constructed poolWhy did Disney make that one pool at the Poly salt water? Is a salt water pool better? Nicer? Pros vs. Cons?
So is it consider an upgrade then pool wise?It's the newest constructed pool
Well, it was until they redid the one at the former WLV, which are now Boulder something Villas. That pool just opened a month or so back. No idea what they did with that one, maybe someone knows.
Between traditional chlorine and salt water it's the newer technology in the world of poolsSo is it consider an upgrade then pool wise?
So is it consider an upgrade then pool wise?
A lot of people self-diagnose themselves with chlorine allergies, but such a thing is incredibly rare. While it is not impossible, I have had several people who claimed such an allergy swim in pools my company manages and had none of the side-effects they associate with chlorine. What typically causes discomfort and rashes are chloramines, which are the byproducts of chlorine reacting with contaminates. A strong chlorine smell indicates an abundance of chloramines and points to too little chlorine in a pool. It makes no difference what produced the chlorine, gas injection, solid or liquid forms of chlorine, or saltwater chlorine generators, once it is in the water chlorine is all the same. Pool water comfort is about properly balancing the water, assuring there is enough chlorine and the pH is properly controlled. There is also no such thing as a "saltwater filtration system", nor a pool that uses "no chemicals" that is open to the public in the US. All public pools MUST use an EPA approved sanitizer, either chlorine, bromine, or biguanide. Local codes dictate what those levels can be and they are regularly inspected and would be shut down if they are not kept within the guidelines. Cruise ships are a totally different situation than pools on land.
As was said above, most pools at WDW are bromine, though they can still be salt pools. The saltwater generator will produce chlorine which almost immediately reacts with the sodium bromide in the water to form bromine. Also the salt level in a saltwater pool in the US is 1/10th that of the ocean. They are about 2000-4000 PPM salt, most people can't even taste it. The ocean, on the other hand, is 35,000 ppm. So the experience is nothing like swimming in seawater.
This would be a great idea!Are there any/many salt water pools at WDW? I read somewhere that Art of Animation's main pool is salt water. We stayed at AOA 4 years ago and loved it. I have recently developed a severe chlorine allergy/sensitivity, and I'm planning another trip to DW and hoping that either AOA's main pool is still saltwater and/or that other DW resorts are also using saltwater. I have not been able to find any recent info at all and I thought someone on here may know.
Thanks in advance!
Well it sounds like a possible win-win for Disney and the guest.For the guest? Not really, it's just a different method of chlorinating the pool. My guess is that Disney did it because it reduces the cost of maintaining the pool.
It might have just been the pool soup mixed with bodily fluids. Yuck.The oasis pool at the Poly had a distinctly salty taste so I assume it was a salt filtration system.
I'm not a chemist, I can only go by the smell, and the pool I was in didn't have that heavy chlorine smell.