Re: Cyanurics ~
First, welcome to the forum!
The comments are most certainly not directed at you!
However, it is not that CYA is bad and that the smallest amount is good as the cyanurics paper suggests, that is far from the case and there are times when a higher CYA level IS desirable, such as with SWGs and in climates with strong sun such as AZ and FL. Also, gas chlorination warrants the use of higher CYA levels.
What is bad is the indiscriminate use of chlrorinated isocyanurates like trichlor and dichlor (particularly with cartridge and bump style DE filters) and NOT paying attention to the effect they have on the CYA which is all too common and encouraged by the manufacturers of teise products (like Chemtura , who own the Bioguard, Sun, Hydrotech, Omni, Guardex, and mass market AquaChem and PoolTime brands and take the corporate stance that CYA levels up to 200 ppm are not a problem!)
I think that many 'newbies' get the impression that CYA is bad. This is not true, proper use of CYA is the best think that has happened to chlorine sanitized pools in the past 50 years (which is about as long as CYA has been used in pools.) What is bad is ignoring and not understanding what CYA actually does in the pool. Knowledge is power and THAT is what the responses to your initial post are really all about and that this forum is all about.
Understand that there are a lot of people in the pool industry with self serving interests. This forum tries to avoid that and is the only one to my knowledge that does and I am active on several pool and spa forums and have moderated one other popular forum the past and asked to be a moderator on another one so I feel I do have some perspective on this.
Welcome to the forum and please try and understand where the responses came from. They were not directed at you!
Retired pool store and commercial pool maintenance guy.
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