

A simple and effective patented magnetic water conditioner
is now available for your Swimming Pool, Spa or Hot Tub. By simply strapping the
Magnetizer on the return line to the Pool, Spa or Hot Tub, laboratory tests
prove that the magnetic effect reduces sanitizing chemical usage
by 30% to 50% while stabilizing pH, thereby saving you money. The Magnetizer helps to eliminate algae, keep water clean and
improve the clarity of your Pool or Spa.
Swimming Pool users report no more scum caused by body oils. No more
mineral build-up on swimming pool wallss caused by iron and other hard water minerals.
The result is a more luxurious swim due to less chemical irritation
to the eyes and skin, silky soft water.
The Swimming Pool Magnetizer operates automatically, continuously and permanently using no external power source, and has no moving parts to wear
out. Less time is spent maintaining the Swimming Pool or Spa and more
time enjoying it.
The Swimming Pool or Spa Magnetizer creates a positive charge in the water dissolving
hard water minerals. This removes ugly scale, protects equipment
and allows for your heater to operate at scale free, peak efficiency
- saving you many energy dollars.
All this makes Magnetizer Swimming Pool or Spa the natural Green Technology way to enjoy your Swimming Pool, Spa or Hot Tub. A LIFETIME power warranty, a lifetime of savings, and elegantly
conditioned water are the benefits. Order yours today!
Magnetic water treatment is potentially of great benefit in Green Technology pool water treatment in terms of the reduction in use of oxidizing
chemicals in water treatment. Magnetic treatment has been variously
shown to stabilize solution pH, eliminate corrosion of materials
and reduce system downtime. In addition to the reduction in running
costs, physical water treatment is generally viewed as being more
environmentally acceptable; reducing the use of the strong oxidizing
chemicals conventionally employed for disinfecting.
This study determines the efficacy of a magnetic treatment
device on the inactivation of a model micro-organism (Escherichia
coli), chlorine consumption and concomitant disinfecting by product
formation in a swimming pool water analogue. Effects of magnetic
water treatment on physical parameters such as scale deposition;
conductivity and pH are reported, as well as the key performance
determinands of chlorine consumption, micro-organism inactivation
rate and trihalomethane (THM) formation. A commercially available
magnetic treatment device (Magnetizer) was used throughout.
It was found that in all cases chlorine loss was more rapid in the control than in the magnetically treated water. The bactericidal efficiency of the free chlorine was unaffected by magnetic treatment, such that the E. coli kill rate for a given disinfectant dose was increased by an average of 25% by this physical conditioning. In addition, it was found that generation of THMs was reduced by magnetic treatment at any one free chlorine level.
Many industries, including the swimming pool industry, are
being urged by regulatory bodies such as PWTAG and pressure groups
to use non-chemical treatment processes wherever possible (Gosling,
1996). PWTAG also places pressure on operators of swimming pools
in the UK to employ the “least hazardous option” in
terms of health and safety and environmental concerns (Gosling,
1996). The contaminants of swimming pool water are mainly urine,
sweat and micro-organisms introduced by the swimmers. The major
disinfectant used in swimming pool water treatment is sodium hypochlorite
which has a bactericidal action that can be suppressed to some
extent by interaction with other chemical contaminants (Black,
1996). Reaction with these organic contaminants result in the
generation of disinfecting by products (DBPs), the simplest of
which are the trihalomethanes (THMs). The nature of these products
and the extent to which they are generated depends upon the prevailing
physical and chemical conditions (PWTAG, 1995). However, they
are generally undesirable as they are all at least suspected carcinogens,
teratogens and mutagens (Gosling, 1996).
The application of magnetic treatment to water has a long
history, and has been used mostly to remove and control scale
deposition (Donaldson, 1988; Baker and Judd, 1995). Calcium carbonate
scale is estimated to cost industry around £ 1 billion per
year (Darvill, 1993). The benefits of magnetic water treatment
are claimed to include energy and water savings along with a range
of benefits which prolong the life of the system's component parts
and hence the life of the system itself. Magnetic treatment has
been shown to stabilize pH, eliminate corrosion, reduce downtime,
maintenance and cleaning costs and bacteria and remove the risks
associated with the handling of chemical detergents such as sodium
hypochlorite used in swimming pool water treatment (Ifill, 1994).
Magnetic treatment has been successful in a range of systems
including industrial heat exchangers, cooling towers, water treatment
plants and household use (Baker and Judd, 1995), and may prove
useful to the leisure industry in reducing the heating and disinfecting
expenses involved in managing swimming pools. In addition to
this physical water treatment is more environmentally acceptable,Green Technology, than the use of strong oxidizing chemicals.
Water is the major component of bacterial cells and the dissolved ion content in the intracellular water is the source of nutrition
for the cell. One report shows that magnetic treatment of water
can enhance the solubility of ions in the water, and proposes
this the mechanism by which magnetic fields affect biological
systems (Lin and Yotvat, 1990). It has also been proposed that
magnetism may affect ion polarity, increasing membrane permeability
and hence the amount of chlorine which can enter a cell, thereby
enhancing its disinfecting properties (Ayrapetyan et al, 1994).
A number of reports exist investigating the mechanisms by which
magnetically treated water affects the cells and micro-organisms,
the observed effects apparently varying from stimulatory to inhibitory
depending on field strength and frequency of the magnetic field
(Chizhov, 1975; Goodman et al, 1976; Moore, 1979; Berg, 1993).
Many reports are concerned with the nature of the medium in which
the micro-organisms exist (Berg, 1993; Okuno et al, 1993). Strong
magnetic fields have been seen to enhance the growth of the model
bacterium Escherichia coli cultured on a range of growth media
(Okuno et al, 1993), but on the other hand, low strength alternating
and pulsed fields have been shown to inhibit growth (Smith et
al, 1993).
The last few years have seen the development of magnetic treatment devices (MTDs) for, amongst other applications, swimming pool
water treatment. It is claimed by the suppliers of these devices
that such devices have a number of beneficial effects including:
Of special interest, and as a direct consequence of the above,
is filter surface loading or fouling. Fouling of sand filters
in swimming pool treatment can be largely attributed to clogging
of the surface of the filter by organic materials, such that backflushing
becomes necessary long before the full capacity of the filter
has been reached. The application of a magnetic field via the
specified magnetic treatment device might thus be expected to
reduce the fouling of the filters by:
a) Inhibition of biological growth and/or
b) Enhanced breakdown of organic materials due to the maintenance
of higher chlorine levels in the water.
It is these two key phenomena that form the basis of the study.
One of PWTAGs stated main principles is that “the less
disinfectant and other chemicals needed to maintain good water
quality, the better”, and that “the only chemical you
should use is a lot of water” (Gosling, 1996). In addition
to this basic premise, enhanced disinfecting would be of great
benefit in terms of cost. At the moment, pools in the UK spend
an average of £500 per annum on disinfectants. Should the
25% saving previously claimed be possible, the 1600 pools in this
country would save a total of £2 million on disinfecting
costs per year (Ifill, 1994).
To assess the extent of the possible benefit MWT could have
for the treatment of swimming pool water, the literature survey
covered the following areas:
1) The operation and standards of swimming pools
2) Disinfecting of swimming pools*
3) Chemical contamination of swimming pools
4) Biological contamination of swimming pools
5) Factors affecting disinfecting
6) Magnetic treatment of water
7) The effects of magnetic fields on biological activity
8) The effects of magnetic fields on chemical activity
*Where “disinfecting” is defined as the conscious
inactivation of pathogenic organisms and viruses.
2.1 The operation and standards of swimming pools
The Pool Water Treatment Advisory Groups (PWTAG’s) Pool
Water Guide (1995) sets out guidelines and outlines legislation
which ensures water quality and therefore public safety. The
regulations control water temperature and chemical additions and
bather load in order to ensure bather safety and good water quality.
The treatment of swimming pool water is made compulsory by The
Swimmers Pools Regulations of September 1991 4 (1) in Britain,
and on the continent by other European legislation such as DIN
standard 19 643 in Germany. PWTAG guidelines give maximum bather
load as 1 bather per 2.5 m² for safety, whereas the Department
of Environment (DOE) uses the formula below in order to maintain
water quality. PWTAG lay down strict guidelines for pool water
quality in terms of suspended and dissolved solids as well as
physical properties (Table 1).
The study was conducted on the laboratory scale. The device
was tested on simulated swimming pool water of known chemical
and microbiological composition using a water of specification
within PWTAG recommended concentration ranges (Table 8). Tests
were restricted to relatively hard waters where scaling is more
visible, although effects on scale formation were not rigorously
quantified. Faecal coliform was used as the microbiological contaminant
throughout the course of study, and human urine and sweat analogues
were added (specified in Table A1, Appendix A). All tests were
conducted using Spectrosol grade sodium hypochlorite with 12%
free available chlorine (w/v) as the disinfectant and calcium
bicarbonate to represent hardness of 200 ppm as CaCO3, which would
encourage scale formation while remaining within PWTAG’s
guidelines.
Component Low High Reference
Sodium Hypochlorite (mg/l) 0.42 1.40 1.05
Free chlorine (mg/l) 0.50 1.50 1.00
Sodium bicarbonate (mg/l) 168.00 336.00 336.00
Calcium Chloride (mg/l) 55.00 222.00 222.00
Sodium Humate (mg/l) 0.00 0.02 0.01
Sodium Chloride (mg/l) 0.00 2000.00 0.00
Sodium Sulphate (mg/l) 0.00 1500.00 0.00
PH 7.20 7.80 7.80
Temperature (°C) 28.00 32.00 32.00
*Body fluid simulant (ml/l) 0.00 0.05 0.05
* Simple analogue of human urine and sweat: Table A1.
The investigation was focused on the suppression of chlorine
desorption, and increased bactericidal action. Previous work
within the School of Water Sciences (Ifill, 1994) has revealed
that magnetic treatment has a small but significant effect on
the retention of free chlorine, as well as on calcium carbonate
scale formation. It was intended that further work be carried
out to verify trends observed in the previous study, and determine
the extent to which the observed chlorine retention affects the
formation of THM by-products. In addition, the direct influence
of magnetic forces on bacteria viability will be studied.
The aim of the work was to test the efficacy of a magnetic treatment device (Magnetizer) in conditioning simulant swimming pool water so as to enhance chemical disinfecting. To this end, the effect of the magnetic treatment on both microbiological and chemical activity was to be quantified.
It was intended that quantitative or semi-quantitative assessment of the effect of MTD’s on free chlorine level, combined chlorine
level, disinfecting by-product formation, with specific reference
to trihalomethanes and disinfecting capability for faecal coliform
would be provided, and that the results would refer to chemical
conditions simulating those persisting in a normal swimming pool.
Mean chloroform concentrations after an initial free chlorine
dose of 0.4 ppm
ANCOVA of mean chloroform concentrations at 0.4 ppm initial
dose
Source of Variation Sum of Squares DF Mean Square F Sig of
F
CovariatesCombined CI (ppm)Free CI (ppm)PHTemperature (°C)Time
(hours) 1.0900.9760.1901.76975.514 11111 1.0900.9760.1901.76975.514
0.3070.2750.0530.50721.298 0.0580.6010.8180.4790.000
Main EffectPresence of MTD 20.429 1 20.429 5.660 0.000
ExplainedResidualTotal 120.415283.651404.006 68086 20.0693.5464.698
19.000 0.000
1) The pH of pool simulant solutions increased when organic
compounds were present and decreased when they were absent.
2) No changes in solution conductivity were found.
Magnetizer comment: This is to be expected since there was no
evaporative water loss.
3) No scale was formed, so no conclusive results were obtained.
Magnetizer comment: With virtually no make up water or loss, scaling
could not be significant.
4) The turbidity of the solutions increased by an undetermined
amount.
Magnetizer comment: If a filter would have been used in the test
rig, particles could have been filtered out.
5) No direct biocidal effects were observed.
Magnetizer comment: Test was only run in 8 - hour day shift.
6) The cell death rate of E coli was significantly raised owing
to increased aqueous chlorine.
7) Concentrations of free chlorine in solution were significantly
increased by MWT at 0.8 and 1.2 ppm free chlorine doses.
8) Concentrations of combined chlorine in solution were significantly
increased by MWT at and 1.2 ppm free chlorine doses.
9) Cell kill was improved at 0.4, 0.8 and 1.2 ppm initial free
chlorine doses.
10) Chloroform production was suppressed at 0.4 and 1.2 ppm initial
free chlorine doses; at 0.4 ppm this was significant.
Return Policy: Pool/Spa Conditioners must be used for 90 days, and if not satisfied, return within the following 30 days for a full refund (minus the S&H & credit card fees). No questions asked. Magnetizers must be installed for a period of 90 days so that they may properly solve each unique hard water situation. (Note: Refunds are for 2 or 3 pair orders only. Two or three pairs are recommended to obtain Magnetizer's full benefits. One set may be insufficient and will not be refunded. Must be returned in like-new, clean condition. There will be a 25% restocking fee if you do not actually use Magnetizers for 90 days as you must give them a chance to work.

|
Special on MSO
& HGH! |
Customized to your needs &
pipe size. |
![]() MAGNETIZER® Engine Sets Customized to your type of vehicle. Special on ALL sets! Call us (1-800-76-WATER) to receive $10 discount. SAVE GAS & DIESEL with MAGNETIZER View Video |