View Full Version : calcium hypo vs. calcium chloride
Oclat
06-03-2010, 08:48 PM
Hi,
I have a plaster pool which has a low calcium reading according to my recent test. It is at 160 and I need to get it up to between 200-400. I was using some cal hypo that was around 50% calcium, but recently bought some calcium flakes that says minimum 77%. My pool is approx 30,000 gallons. Does anybody know how to calculate how much 1lb of 77% calcium choride is adding to the pool in ppm? My CYA is at 35%, so I am using this as my sanitizer until I get to my 200+ Calcium reading, then bleach. And what is the difference between cal hypo & calcium chloride. BTW, the calc hypo was by ProGuard or something.
thanks,
Steve
chem geek
06-03-2010, 09:25 PM
You can use The Pool Calculator (http://www.thepoolcalculator.com/) to calculate dosages.
polyvue
06-04-2010, 01:20 AM
Hi,
I have a plaster pool which has a low calcium reading according to my recent test. It is at 160 and I need to get it up to between 200-400. I was using some cal hypo that was around 50% calcium, but recently bought some calcium flakes that says minimum 77%. My pool is approx 30,000 gallons. Does anybody know how to calculate how much 1lb of 77% calcium choride is adding to the pool in ppm? My CYA is at 35%, so I am using this as my sanitizer until I get to my 200+ Calcium reading, then bleach. And what is the difference between cal hypo & calcium chloride. BTW, the calc hypo was by ProGuard or something.
Cal-Hypo = CaOCl2
Calcium hypochlorite is a chlorine compound (adds both chlorine and calcium)
Increases both Free Chlorine (FC) and Calcium Hardness (CH)
Calcium chloride = CaCl2
Calcium (sometimes potassium chloride is added) to increase Calcium Hardness (CH)
CarlD
06-04-2010, 06:37 AM
As I thought Calcium Carbonate was the usual calcium increaser I wondered if Calcium Chloride releases its chlorine into the water as well.
As a vinyl pool owner I've only ever used Calcium Hypochlorite as either a convenient shocking agent or in a failed attempt to use the junk HTH tablets as a slow-release method of chlorination.
We were going away and I didn't want the increase in CYA and decrease in acid from tri-chlor tabs. The tabs turned to a clogging paste in my skimmer in less than 12 hours, rather than the 5 days HTH claimed. HTH had stopped making the capsule-enclosed version. (I think PoolLife or someone still makes them).
Oclat
06-04-2010, 08:37 AM
Thanks for the replies, not sure that pool calculator is works right on the Calcium. I did a set up and entered current level and desired level and got something like .4 oz to add. Try it, something is not right with it or I need to enter more zeros to get the correct amount to add.
polyvue
06-04-2010, 04:06 PM
As I thought Calcium Carbonate was the usual calcium increaser I wondered if Calcium Chloride releases its chlorine into the water as well.
Apparently not. Though don't ask me to explain the chemistry:
Calcium chloride can serve as a source of calcium ions in a solution; unlike many other calcium compounds, which are insoluble, calcium chloride is able to dissociate.
3 CaCl2 + 2 K3PO4 (aq) → Ca3(PO4)2 (s) + 6 KCl (aq)
Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calcium_chloride