Took me awhile to find my copies, at least of what I have. I don't think I've ever seen anything by him on equipment troubleshooting.
Regarding the equipment book, my guess is the info is somewhat out of date. He's older than I am (57) and has been retired for a number of years. Last I heard (10 years ago) he was living about 70 miles ESE of me, in the mountains of NE. Georgia. But, I've never seen that book.
Regarding anything published by the NSPF . . . they are STILL a chem manufacturer funded organization, I believe. And it would literally -- not figuratively, but actually -- bankrupt the chemical companies if most pool owners knew and used the info published here. That used to scare me, because BioLab could have sued me, even if it was a bogus lawsuit, and shut me down because I couldn't have paid to fight back. Now, they are losing anyhow, because of SWCG's. But they are still going to put it off as long as possible.
Anyhow, the books I have were published by Service Industry News. My guess is what you have may be updates.
pH, Alkalinity, Water Testing, & Water Balance (1988)
- bogus pH restriction levels
- bogus pH effect info (bleach causes pH to rise)
- bogus 'how-to-lower-alkalinity' (just add acid)
- bogus guideline: "pH determines sanitizer effectiveness" (No, on outdoor pools, it's CYA -- see best guess page)
- bogus discussion of hardness: "if (soft) water is denied a diet of pool plaster it will eat the (iron, aluminum, copper) instead"
+ reasonably good description of how to collect a good sample
+ decent discussion of testing reagents and methods.
Guide to Chlorine - 1989
+ useful outline of chlorine sources
- bogus discussion of chlorine gas (if what he claims was true, PoolChlor, which has been servicing 10,000's of pools for 40+ years, would be out of business.)
- bogus discussion of HOCl / -OCl ratios (these, common to almost all pool books) are actually valid only for pools with no stabilizer.
- bogus discussion of chlorine 'breakpoint' chemistry.
Wow. I haven't looked at those in years. Talk about memory lane.
For the time (1990's), Lowry's data was much better than other published material. Jock Hamilton with United Chemical knew that much of it was bogus, but he had his own axe to grind, and no interest in changing a business that created -- with its chemical nonsense -- the very problems his products "solved".
I don't know if you are a homeowner or a service guy.
If you are a service guy, and can sift the good from the bad, I'd buy his books, and use PF, PoolSolutions and TroubleFreePools to guide your sifting. The problem is my sites and TFP are oriented to pool owners, not service guys. That probably won't change, because there's no market for a "PoolSolutions Guide to Chemistry for Pool Service Guys".
Chem_Geek may write a 700 page "Analytical Guide to Swimming Pool Chemicals and Their Application". If he does, I'll pony up the likely $250 per copy cost, and consider it worth it. But I don't think it will be much help to most pool owners or service guys.
If you are a home owner with a pool, I'd leave Lowry and the NSPF alone.
Does that help?
Ben
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