You can even do both!
With the borates, you'll need the special test strips. You'll also need acid to bring the pH back down as Borax is our recommend chem for raising pH.
I haven't tried the borates 50ppm setting, but it makes a lot of sense.
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You can even do both!
With the borates, you'll need the special test strips. You'll also need acid to bring the pH back down as Borax is our recommend chem for raising pH.
I haven't tried the borates 50ppm setting, but it makes a lot of sense.
Thanks guys! I won't be able to add borates as I have 2 dogs that LOVE to drink pool water. After a walk, they're both really hot and they like nothing better than to jump into this pool's tanning/play area, swish their faces in and around the water and drink up some water. They did the same thing with our last pool, as well.
I was part of a thread a couple years back when borates were first coming up as a topic and I think it was you, Evan, who mentioned you also had pets but had taught them not to drink from the pool.
I could train them to not drink the pool water but I've just chosen not to...at least at this point.:)
And, I am aware that high chlorine levels are also a risk to them, so had to manage their activities when the pool was first at FC=23. Would you still use PolyQuat in a pool where pets drank a good bit of water on a daily basis?
Sandy,
I did not see it mentioned in the previous threads, but you may need to keep adding muriatic acid to keep the pH down with a plaster pool, especially if it is fairly new.
The calcium from the walls will keep leaching out until the conditions have stabilized.
Pat
Thanks for that reminder Pat. Although the home and pool are new to us, the pool was actually built in 2004-2006 time frame, I think. Sorry if my use of the word, "new" threw you...:)