so the kit i have is not enough ?
My water is crystal clear already lucky me
i can not click on your link there. it says i do not have Access to.
so the kit i have is not enough ?
My water is crystal clear already lucky me
i can not click on your link there. it says i do not have Access to.
Might have to give it a day or two before Ben finishes your registration--once it's upgraded, you'll be able to clink on the link. The test kit you have is good for testing chlorine and pH--but will not test for alk or CYA. The alk isn't that crucial in most cases, but the CYA is--the CYA is what's going to determine how high you need to keep your chlorine.
Do you know the volume of your pool? We'll need to know that to help calculate how much of a chem is required to change from one value to another.
Wait until the end of the week to try and order the kit Janet recommended. The Amazon sellers that we usually refer people to are apparently out of stock but they typically restock fairly quickly. When you check, if Amato Industries is shown as having them in stock, go ahead. They have a good price for it.
about 5400k gallons
On a 5,400 gallon pool, a gallon of plain 6% household bleach will add about 12 ppm of free chlorine.
The OTO / phenol red 'dye' kit is MUCH more reliable than the test strips usually sold today. However, there's no 'cheapie' way to measure CYA (cyanuric acid), plus if you run your chlorine levels correctly, as a function of your CYA level, you have to be able to measure higher levels of chlorine than you can easily do with OTO.
PoolDoc / Ben
yes but what about the borax and baking soda. what are they used for and how much would be needed for PH changes ?
12'x18' oval 5.2K gal AG vinyl pool; DE filter fast tablets; ec 40 DE filter; not sure pump; hrs; just a standard dye kit. oh/chlorine only; garden hose; PF:23
Hi Wrag;
Borax is used to raise the pH, or to create a borate residual > 50 ppm, which makes your pool somewhat resistant to algae, and tends to make it 'sparkle' more, apparently by modifying the refractive index of water slightly.
Baking soda is used to raise alkalinity -- it's EXACTLY the same chemical as is sold by pool stores as "Alkalinity Increaser"
If you would, please post your pool info -- it helps us keep give better info.Pool Chart Entry Form
Pool Chart Results
Last edited by PoolDoc; 06-20-2012 at 04:59 PM. Reason: fix pool chart links
PoolDoc / Ben
12x18 AG pool
4 feet deep.
so i would use the same amount of baking soda as i would of the pool store chemical
?
12'x18' oval 5.2K gal AG vinyl pool; DE filter fast tablets; ec 40 DE filter; not sure pump; hrs; just a standard dye kit. oh/chlorine only; garden hose; PF:23
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