Pristiva Primer and Activator
Has anyone on the forum used or has any opinions of the Pristiva Primer and Activator (Salt)? I have just put in my second batch of the primer and it appears that my pool is having issues keeping my chlorine levels up. I have ordered and awaiting delivery of my Taylor K-2006 test kit. Once it comes in, I will post some numbers. I was just curious to see if anyone else had used or uses this product and wanted some opinions of the product.
Thanks,
Chris
Re: Pristiva Primer and Activator
It's basically salt with some unknown additives but since the company is being run by an ex Bioguard Executive I would guess it's very similar to Bioguards Mineral Springs Beginnings and Renewal. In other words, an expensive mix of salt, CYA and borax!
They use a lot of hype on their website about "Nova Scotia Salt" and "X2O enhancers" (but never really explain what these are of what they do!) so I would have to say that this subsidiary of North American Salt/Compass Minerals is mostly marketing and not much substance! If there was any substance to it there would be some research to back it up!
Re: Pristiva Primer and Activator
Pristiva:
Pristiva, Inc. (A Compass Minerals Company) => pristiva DOT net
9900 West 109th St., Suite 600
Overland Park, KS 66210
Domain Name: PRISTIVA . NET
Registrar: NETWORK SOLUTIONS, LLC.
Whois Server: whois.networksolutions.com
Updated Date: 22-mar-2010
Creation Date: 16-may-2008
Expiration Date: 16-may-2014
Administrative Contact, Technical Contact:
Compass Minerals International tsmanager@compassminerals.com => CMP @ Google Finance
9900 West 109th Street, Suite 600 => Google Map
Overland Park, KS 66210
913-344-9279 fax: 913-344-9273
Their claim:
The end result of this scientific development process is the unique blend of X2O enhancers contained in both Pristiva Primer® and Activator products. Designed to be used without harmful phosphates, sulfates and metallic based treatment products, The Pristiva System uses X2O to outperform existing products in the marketplace, even in the harsh conditions found inside the ECG. The final outcome is a salt water pool that will perform better, look better, last longer and be easier to maintain than any other salt pool program anywhere. And as an additional benefit, the additives in X2O will make the water feel even better to your eyes, skin and hair than an ordinary salt water pool. We named it X2O because it takes ordinary H2O to another dimension of enjoyment
http://pristiva.net/storage/print-fr...of-x2o_pfv.pdf
Other references (archived)
http://pristiva.net/performance; http://pristiva.net/guarantee/
Re: Pristiva Primer and Activator
This is my first time on this forum but I’d like to respond to some the questions and comments that have been raised about Pristiva. My name is Geoff Brown and I’m a Developmental Scientist in Pristiva’s R&D department. Just to tell you a little about myself, I’m a 22 year veteran of the pool industry and have developed a number of new pool and spa products throughout that time. In addition, I’ve been actively involved in advocacy organizations and held leadership positions on APSP committees.
First of all, I’d like to address the comments posed by cjryan33 regarding low chlorine readings at start up. When this occurs, supplemental chlorine should be added until it reaches the desired, stable level. In spite of the issues that you’re experiencing they are temporary and the pool will continue to look great, as advertised. Also, I’d be more than happy to send you an Information Bulletin that describes how to optimize start ups in Pristiva pools. It addresses the questions you’ve raised and gives easy-to-follow steps that simplify the start up process.
Second, I’d like to address some misunderstandings about what Pristiva’s additives are and what they are not. The additives that make Pristiva unique are trademarked as X2O. The reason why the company does not disclose the composition of X2O is because it is proprietary. Divulging the formula would be analogous to Coca Cola® sharing its secret formula with their competitors. Suffice it to say though, Pristiva contains no cyanuric acid (CYA).
Also, years of intensive research and development are behind Pristiva and its superior performance has been verified by independent, third party testing. Moreover, the product is substantially different from BioGuard’s Mineral Springs®. Although both products make similar claims, Mineral Springs is rich in two troublesome, scale promoting compounds. Specifically, Mineral Springs adds large amounts phosphate and sulfate, which can combine with calcium to form scale inside the electrolytic chlorine generator. By contrast, and very much by design, Pristiva does not use phosphate or sulfate-based products.
To put all of this in its proper perspective, thousands of pool owners across the US and Canada are using Activator and Primer. The overwhelming majority of these customers are not having issues and are delighted with the feel and convenience of their Pristiva Pool.
Cjryan33, I’d like to thank you for using Pristiva and to assure you that you and your customer’s satisfaction is our primary concern. I hope this addresses the questions and misunderstandings, but please feel free to call me if you want to additional details. [ PoolDoc note: Contact info deleted -- subscribing doesn't give you the right to promote your company here. Once you've delivered HARD evidence that your product works, we'll reconsider ]
Re: Pristiva Primer and Activator
Hi Geoff;
While I appreciate your attempts to support the value of your product, nothing you've said here is likely to persuade me, or any of the moderators and contributors here that your product has any value, except as a means of boosting income for Compass and its dealers. While I appreciate that novel but un-patentable products can be protected by obscuring their nature, I'm sure you can appreciate that useless old products can be obscured the same way . . . and yet acquire a new and marketable cachet via a catchy sounding trademark, like "X20" for example.
I gather that Compass is new to the pool industry.
Many of us are not. Speaking only for myself, I've witnessed 30 years of product shyster-ism by both small businesses and big corporations. During that time, I've learned -- often through painful and personal experience -- that most of what claims to be "new and improved" is neither.
We can accept at face value your claim that the Pristiva products are not yet another re-incarnation of the various blends of borax, polyphosphates, and copper that have played such a large role in the "new and improved" products foisted on naive consumers over the last decade.
But the fact that Pristiva's products aren't like those in no way supports the premise that they have any unique value.
The simple reality is that it's not hard to prove that your products work. If you've done so, show us the beef, so to speak. You can take a look at the China Shop, and quickly determine that there are a number of us here who are quite comfortable reading peer-reviewed scientific literature.
We've seen -- and archived -- your brochures, and aren't really very impressed. I'm not going to reproduce the article I published years ago on "Blue Water Voodoo", but years before Compass even dreamed of Pristiva, I explained in some detail how I could hire a "gold neck-chain sales promoter" and sell fancy jugs filled with blue water and silicone thickener AND provide a 120% money-back guarantee AND make money doing so.
You inform us you are active in the APSP. Not to put to fine a point on it, but so what? The APSP is, as the NSPI was, dominated by the corporate chemical players, and reflects their interests, not those of pool owners.
For the past 3 decades, chemical company after chemical company has attempted to make gold out of feathers, by creating a putative 'need' for specialty chemicals, thus allowing them to escape the nasty and low profit margins that come from selling mere commodities. The great majority of these products are unnecessary 90% of the time; the remainder are NEVER needed. Your 22 years in the industry means that it is likely that you have worked for one of these companies. And, it means that you know -- as I do -- that in the pool industry a "developmental chemist" is not someone who researches new and more efficient ways to manage pool chemistry, but rather is usually someone who re-blends the 15 or 20 existing pool chemicals into new mixes that can be sold as "new" and "improved" and (more expensive at retail) and (less expensive to make).
In 30 years, I've seen possibly 4 new chemical products, in TOTAL: the chitosan products, the enzymes, the lanthanum phosphate removers, and the new CuLator products. CuLator is the only one of those that might have significant specific value -- IF it works. The chitosans are another way to clarify, not a particular better way. The enzymes may -- or may not -- be occasionally valuable. And now the "ESSENTIAL" lanthanum products have suddenly become non-essential, with China closing down the supply.
So, in 30 years, there has not been a single, proven, SIGNIFICANT new chemical product. But there have been hundreds, maybe thousands, of chemicals that claimed to be all those things. So, just by the historical odds, it's 100 to 1 that your product even works differently, and it's 500 to 1 that the difference (if it exists) matters.
You want us to trust you? Fine. Prove that you are NOT like all the other chemical companies that have gone before you!
You don't want us to know what's in your product? That's fine, too. But PROVE that it works or we will be convinced that your well written post, filled with vague and meaningless implications of value, is all the substance Pristiva has to offer.
You wrote:
Quote:
Also, years of intensive research and development are behind Pristiva and its superior performance has been verified by independent, third party testing.
Fine. Send them to us. We'll read them very carefully.
Until you do, we'll continue warn people not to waste their money on products with vague and unproven claims.
Re: Pristiva Primer and Activator
Dear PoolDoc,
I’d like to thank you for your candid response to my post and I wholeheartedly agree with your perspective on the dubious and/or snake-oil type products that our industry seems to attract. As a result, I’m also quite skeptical of products (and not just those in our industry) that make unsubstantiated claims. On these things we agree and see eye to eye. However, I think that we will probably have to agree to disagree on some of the other points, especially as they relate to Pristiva. Specifically, Pristiva has data with which to substantiate it’s performance claims. Some of this data has been incorporated into a patent application while some of the other, more recent data has been shared publicly at the last two IPSPE trade shows. Although our target audience for these presentations was and continues to be prospective customers only, we’re aware that scientists working for our competitors have also seen our test data. After two years, we have yet to receive a data-driven rebuttal from any of these companies. Realistically, I don’t expect this to change your position, but that was not my goal. My goals were to thank you for your candor, and also to assure our customers that Pristiva has solid performance data that substantiate our claims. Prospective customers can and should review our data package in order to make informed buying decisions and, as noted in your earlier post, visit [ Pristiva's website - live sales links NOT allowed ] for more information.
--
Regards,
Geoff – a fellow skeptic
Re: Pristiva Primer and Activator
Well Geoff, that's a better response than I expected.
But, unfortunately it's still a non-substantial response. And, until you provide actual data -- EITHER concerning the make-up and mode of operation of your product OR of field performance testing, the only possible counsel we can offer our members here is that Pristiva has done nothing publicly to support its claim of "solid performance data".
When you are ready to actually share that "solid performance data", and let us evaluate just how solid it is, we will continue to warn our members that they are better off leaving pool industry "mystery chemicals", like Pristiva's products, on the pool stores' shelves.
And there is NO way, we are going to encourage people to visit your site, which is long on 'sizzle' but short on 'steak'. Rather, we will use your site as currently configured (May 2012) as a masterful example of how pool company's can SOUND like they are saying something, which actually, they are saying nearly nothing at all.
Re: Pristiva Primer and Activator
Geoff,
I will add my simpler take: If I don't know what is in a product I put into my pool, it doesn't go into my pool.
Coca-Cola may have a secret formula but it doesn't have secret ingredients. That is the object of the Pure Food And Drug Act signed by Teddy Roosevelt. So the analogy isn't valid.
When it comes to what I will recommend to our users, it is very simple. If I don't know what it is, I do not recommend it. For me, that is a line I simply will not cross. My children get into my pool, ingest some of the water, as we all do, and I will not have them ingest any unknown chemical. How well the product works, all the assurances of safety you can provide do not matter to me.
If I don't know what is in it, I won't use it. I won't recommend it.
CarlD
Re: Pristiva Primer and Activator
As a SWCG owner and user for a couple of years now, I am delighted with the ease, feel and convenience using plain Salt. My only “issue” is rising pH, and I have only had to clean my SWCG twice since installing it in May, 2010. The cleaning process took 20-30 minutes and used a total of a couple of cups of Muriatic Acid.
Your claim of better feel and convenience, I already enjoy. Salt is cheap, around $7 per 40 lb. bag. So compared to Salt, what does your product offer? Does it make the pool water feel twice as nice as plain salt? How does one measure that? At what price?
The shelves of my local pool store are filled with products with promises similar to the same ones you have made, and many of us on this Forum as well as across North America have been “Pool Stored” by slick talking salesmen with “Magic Pills” and “Miracle Powders” that try to make a year’s wages in six months, so that is where those products stay, on the shelf of the Pool Store.
I honestly have never heard of your product probably because I am not in the Market for it. Your product may be as good as you say, but secret ingredients simply scare me for the same reasons Carl mentioned. Water, Salt, Muriatic Acid, and a little CYA, is all that I want, need, and put into my pool. These products have stood the test of time with regards to safety and results, as well as cost.
Re: Pristiva Primer and Activator
Re: Pristiva Primer and Activator
Wow....... I did not mean to start such a somewhat heated debate. The main reason I put that stuff in my pool, was that we have very hard water where I live in Fulshear, TX and was told this would help with the scaling and calcium build up. I am a new pool owner and still learning the ways..... Im hoping my Taylor K-2006 kit comes in today, so I can get an accurate account of what my pool is up to. I will say that my experience so far, has not been the greatest. A lot of Im sure is the fact I dont really know what Im doing. I will post some numbers up hopefully this weekend and from what I have read, yall will have a more economical way to maintain my pool.
Thanks,
Chris
Re: Pristiva Primer and Activator
[ When you get your kit, post the results and I'll see if I can help you. There a couple of practical ways to lower scale producing chemicals in pool water, even when the fill water is pretty messed up. Besides test results, we'll need details on your pump and filter system, since you have to take those minerals out as some form of deposited debris on the filter (or maybe, on the pool bottom, in which case you need "vacuum to waste" capability). ]
But, it's not your fault that the thread took the turn it did. We just work pretty hard to slam the door on new mystery goo products -- we see several new ones each year. To date, since the inception of the forum, we've not seen a single such product that turned out to be worth the money. AND, we've seen many that turned out to be harmful to your pool.
It's *possible* that Pritiva will turn out to be the exception. However the odds are very much against it.
Making it even LESS likely that it will be a worthwhile product is the fact that the Pristiva brand unit is being run by a former BioLab executive. BioLab has a 30 year history of taking $0.50/lb potatoes and turning them into $6.00/lb
pommes frites!
More recently (and more desperately), they've been making product blends that -- in our experience -- make pools more DIFFICULT to run.
I've talked to many BioLab technical people over the years. I have ALWAYS found them very knowledgeable, and I've never been lied to (that I know of) by a BioLab'r. But, I and several others here, have found that they "tell the truth" in amazingly artful ways. To put it another way, if President Clinton had learned to 'tell the truth' like a BioLab'r, he probably never would have been impeached for perjury, and no one would have ever known about Monica!
Because of this experience several of us have shared, we NEVER trust anyone who has an association with BioLab. There are several 'tell-tales' in the Pristiva guy's posts that are consistent with the BioLab 'way of truth-telling'. He might be straight up, but we have no way of knowing that, since he's not ready to share any of that proof or those studies he has referred to.
There can be an EXCELLENT reason for not sharing such information. I have a file drawer full of such studies (none from BioLab!), and what many of them show is that the product studied 'works' in the sense that a lab evaluation can detect an improvement, but the improvement is so small that no one would notice in the field.
My guess is, Pristiva does work in that manner: well enough to detect but not well enough to matter!
Re: Pristiva Primer and Activator
"I like them french fried potaters."
Re: Pristiva Primer and Activator
Quote:
Originally Posted by
PoolDoc
We just work pretty hard to slam the door on new mystery goo products -- we see several new ones each year. To date, since the inception of the forum, we've not seen a single such product that turned out to be worth the money. AND, we've seen many that turned out to be harmful to your pool.
Keep up the good Work, Ben! The education and awarness you publish is huge. There is no lower feeling than to have your kids or grandkids look you in the eye and tell you that they don't want to swim in your pool anymore because their eyes burn or its too dirty etc. I was there a few years ago. I refuse to let my family swim in Toxic Waste ever again!
Re: Pristiva Primer and Activator
My kit came in this weekend and I have some test results for yall. I had some issues getting the Combined Chlorine. Here are the numbers:
FC - 5ppm
CC - ?? When adding the drops of the R-0003 regent, the sample would not turn pink. I added up to 15 drops and it stayed clear the whole time.
PH - 8
Minerals - 330ppm - per K-1766 test kit.
CH-410
TA - 120
CYA -35 - This is surprised me a little and I did it twice. When I had my water tested last week at the store they had said 30, then came back with a 60. Per Hayward, my pool should be at 70-90 ppm
As for my pool specs, 26,000 inground, Hayward Goldline Pro Logic Controller, Aqua T-Cell 15 SWGC, Hayward DE 6020 Filter, and Hayward Tri-Star 2.70 HP Self Priming Pump. I am currently running my pumps 13.5hrs. 9hrs at 85% on pump speed then 4.5 hrs at 45% pump speed. My chlorinator is set to 75%.
I had a slight algea issue last week and it has not re-appeared after treatment. I am just wondering if there is anything I can do to make my pool trouble free this summer. Last summer (my first as a pool owner) was not pleasant. I was dumping all sorts of chemicals in the pool trying to get it balanced.
Any assistance or advice is greatly appreciated. At the moment, the pool looks great and the water is clear.
Re: Pristiva Primer and Activator
Quote:
Originally Posted by
cjryan33
CC - ?? When adding the drops of the R-0003 regent, the sample would not turn pink. I added up to 15 drops and it stayed clear the whole time.
You only need a drop or two. Your result just means you had NO CC . . . which is a good thing.
Ok. With a 26K pool, your PF is 4.5
Do this.
1. Turn your SWCG off -- you're just wearing it out, at the moment.
2. Get 2 gallons of muriatic acid, and lower your pH. Read the muriatic acid page first. Add 1/2 gallon at a time; wait 4 hours; test; repeat till you reach 7.6 or below.
3. CAREFULLY re-read the instructions on your K1766; make SURE you are doing it correctly, and then re-test. If you really have a salinity of 330ppm, your SWCG should be in alarm. (Meanwhile, do #1 above!)
4. Dose your pool with 4 gallons of bleach each evening, till you get dichlor OR get stabilizer above 50 ppm and salt above 3,000 ppm.
5a. Get 50# PoolBrand dichlor at Sams Club, OR at Amazon
5b. Buy some stabilizer locally or at Amazon.
5c. Buy dichlor at Amazon (do NOT get it locally, except from Sams -- most are now hodge-podge mystery blends!)
===> To add 40ppm CYA, you need about 9lbs of stabilizer or about 20 lbs of dichlor. Using dichlor will BOTH chlorinate AND add stabilizer AND lower your pH, so it's a very efficient choice for you, at the moment =======
Get back to me, on your results and actions.
Re: Pristiva Primer and Activator
Im sorry, I had a typo. My salinity is 3300ppm
Re: Pristiva Primer and Activator
Re: Pristiva Primer and Activator
Alright Doc,
I turned my SWGC off. This morning I added on gallon of Liquid Chlorine before leaving for work( already had this) it is labled Shock - Chlorinating liquid for Pools and Spas. The wife added a 1/2 gallon of muratic acid and 3lbs of BioGuard Stabilizer 100 (already had as well) next trip to Sams will be picking up the Dichlor. Got home and added 3lbs more of Stabilizer and 1/2 gallon of acid. After swimteam came home and tested. The results are as follows
FC - 6ppm
PH - 7.3
CYA - 55-60. All of the stabilizer may not be dissolved as of yet. Thank you for your assistance.
Re: Pristiva Primer and Activator
Quote:
Originally Posted by
cjryan33
After swimteam came home and tested.
Coach, swimmer, or parent? Summer league or USS?
Re: Pristiva Primer and Activator
Just a parent. I have two daughters 7 & 9 who both love being in the water. This will be their first year on a team. From what I saw from their first practice is that it is very beneficial to have a pool that they can swim in just about year round.
The wife will be picking up some Dichlor on her next trip to Sams. Should I go ahead and get another bottle of stabilizer to get me to the 70-90 range or wait until I get the Dichlor? From the best guess chlorine chart my chlorine ppm level is where it shoudl be. I have 2 more bottles of the liguid chlorine but I did not put any in this morning. My SWGC is still turned off. Should I go ahead and turn it back on at a lower % output? Thanks.
Re: Pristiva Primer and Activator
If you can buy dichlor from Sams, I wouldn't buy any stabilizer. The price is low enough, so that it's cheaper to by dichlor as 50% stabilizer, at $2 per pound, than it is to buy local small quantities of 100% stabilizer at $4 or more per pound.
Buy borax, though, since dichlor will tend to push your pH down over time . . . BUT besides raising the pH, adding enough borax to reach 50+ppm of borates has advantages of its own.