To test the way I said, you'll have to keep people out all day Monday and Tuesday till noon, retest Monday night and Tuesday AM and noon.
Ben
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To test the way I said, you'll have to keep people out all day Monday and Tuesday till noon, retest Monday night and Tuesday AM and noon.
Ben
Just tested.
Last night: FC 23
CC 1
This mourning: FC 23
CC 1
This is the first time Ive had no decrease in FC since all the advice I had been given way back. ill see what happens then test your way if I still have problems. Going on vacation next week so no one will be in the pool then. Thanks
tested again.
This mourning FC 23
4:30pm FC 13
No one in pool all day, fairly sunny with some rain. Seems like a big drop for 8 hours.
I'm going to ask Chem_Geek to look at this, but the only two explanations I know of for this are:
#1 - Your CYA is not as high as your testing is indicating, OR
#2 - There's bromide / bromine in your pool (or iodine, though I don't know how that could be.)
Meanwhile, please read this page:
http://www.poolsolutions.com/tips/on...mine-pool.html
Ben
Thanks Ill read it. The only things Ive ever added is Simplicity Clear Magic, HTH water clarifier, pool brand trichlor pucks(sams club) Borax Muratic acid and years ago HTH slow disolve 3" pucks calhypo
FC 13 @ 4:30
FC 13 @ 8:00 No one in pool all day with sundown mostly after 4:30
Tested dilution method with distilled water
CA 90ppm
Ok. I've talked with Chem_Geek, and his thoughts confirmed mine. Add your second set of no-sun readings that pretty much eliminates possibilities other than the ones I mentioned.
But . . . Chem_Geek noticed some things I hadn't about the way you described your CYA testing.
So
#1 - K200x CYA testing is turbidimetric: the water gets CLOUDY when CYA is present.
#2 - You fill the small sample bottle to the first line with pool water and then add CYA reagent to the 2nd line.
#3 - Shake, wait 15 seconds, shake again, wait 45 seconds.
#4 - Then, carefully add this mix to the small CYA tube side of the kit, adding slowly, till the black dot disappears.
#5 - Stop adding when it disappears, and read your CYA level from the outside, matching water level with the marks.
BUT . . . if you the mixed sample water doesn't get cloudy, you have little or no CYA.
Ben
Ill try the cya again that way but im running out of regeant. I test thsi mourning and it was FC 12 CC 1 with no drop over night. I added 3 qts and just got home. After wife son and dog swam my FC is 5 and my CC is 2. This is a first. Im ready to give up
Shub, I don't want to be rude, but it's not that hard! We're about ready to give up, too.
#1 - Did you mix your pool water 50:50 with reagent in the sample bottle?
If the answer is no, you need to re-read the instructions, and follow them.
If the answer is yes, go to #2
#2 - Did the sample get cloudy?
If the answer is no, you have been reading the test wrong and you need to re-read the instructions, and follow them.
If the answer is yes, then -- and ONLY THEN -- you have a positive high CYA test, and need to go on to #3
#3 - You really have high CYA *and* high chlorine loss to sunlight. There are only 2 ways this can happen:
+ You have added bromine to the pool . . . which you may have done unknowingly! In this case, you'll have to
--- put up with high chlorine use for a period, possibly the rest of the summer, OR
--- drain and refill your pool, but you can't do this with a vinyl inground pool, or with any inground pool in a low or wet area.
+ OR . . . you have discovered some unknown pool chemistry, based on some unknown condition that only exists in your pool. But, if you have, we can't help you, but how to help with unknown pool chemistry based on an unknown condition is unknown.
It is possible for the R-0013 reagent in a kit to be 'bad' . . . but that would almost certainly produce a LOW reading, and NOT the high CYA reading you support.
The initial high CC readings + subsequent loss of chlorine on sunny days in SPITE of high CYA sounds very, very much like the typical response of pools dosed with a lot of one of United Chemical's products.
So . . . the ball is in your court. Why don't you have your pool water tested at a pool dealers? Dealer guess strips are not very accurate with CYA, but they can tell the difference between low and high.
Sincerely
Ben Powell
PS: When you reply, you need to answer questions ONE and TWO with "yes" or "no". You can add something besides yes or no, but we need to see a definite yes or no answer to each question by number.
1 YES
2 YES
3 YES Im sure I have high CYA. Ive tested it with the 2 entire bottles in kit plus the extra big bottle i ordered. The sun is out in full forece but i thought the higher CYA would slow it down
And NO as far as I know, no united chemicals or bromine have been added.
My dog could be peeing in the pool but he always pees when he gets out
I dont trust pool dealers but I guess I can try it.
Dont worry, I would never consider u rude. I know its easy but I cant understand why this is happening based on all the info I have been given.
what is a good website to check united chems products