Lol, glad to see you back this season. I have no explanation for why your CYA numberscreact the way they do-- it will be interesting to see if others share your experience.
Janet
Lol, glad to see you back this season. I have no explanation for why your CYA numberscreact the way they do-- it will be interesting to see if others share your experience.
Janet
Janet
This is just a guess, but if your water temperature is colder upon opening, then if you do the CYA test and don't warm up the water first it will take longer to react to form a precipitate so will read artificially low. If your pool then warms up after opening, your warmer pool water would have a more accurate CYA test. In general, you want to have the test sample at least up to room temperature when doing the CYA test. Or you can just wait longer than 30 seconds for the mixing, though I don't know how long to wait -- maybe double the time for every 10ºF below 70ºF though that's just a guess (so that would be 2 minutes if the water is 50ºF).
Temperature could certainly explain this. I open my pool on the early side and have been timing the weather pretty well (getting dumb lucky) the last few years and hitting an early warm spell soon after opening. I considered the notion for a brief instant that CYA might be heavy and thus wallowing in the hopper until fully mixed, but the bottom drain was a nagging source of doubt, then came my Graduate School Dean, a chemist, who said CYA is no different in suspension than milk in your coffee.
33,000ish gallon, 20X40 IG Vinyl Liner, no heater. Full sun, Sand filter. Been pool stored more times than I can count, not anymore! Thanks PF!
20'x40' rectangle 33K gal IG pool; Bleach; Hayward sand filter; AO Smith 1HP pump; 14hrs; Taylor K2006; utility water; summer: ; winter: ; iPhone; PF:3.6
Bookmarks