Aylad,
You said: "You don't want to test or adjust pH if your chlorine is high, because the pH test results will be falsely high. "
What level is considered "high" for the chlorine?
Peggy
Aylad,
You said: "You don't want to test or adjust pH if your chlorine is high, because the pH test results will be falsely high. "
What level is considered "high" for the chlorine?
Peggy
14 ft. x 4' round AG vinyl pool; 6% bleach; some dichlor shock, some trichlor tabs; Dry acid; Muriatic acid; 1 speed Intex SF15110 SAND filter/pump; 6-8 hrs; Taylor K2006; utility water; no covers yet
In my own small pool, I've noted that the pH false readings seem to start for me at around 30 - 35ppm FC. I don't know if it would be true for a larger pool, though. Another thing I've noted is when the FC is high, the pH test tends to climb the scale over time. The higher the FC, the faster the climb. At 50 FC, it is a noticeable color change. Like within seconds, the color will change from 7.2 all the way to above 8.0. Where at 30 FC, the change creeps up on you, taking 2-3 min to go from 7.4 to 7.6.
As I said, this appears to be true for a ~4.4k gal pool, but as I have nothing to compare it to, I don't know about larger or smaller pools.
15' round 4.8K gal Intex AG pool; Intex 633 pump with twin canisters (2500 gph main filtering); Unicel 5315 filter cartridges; Intex 637 pump w/o filter (1000 gph heater circulation); 4hrs; K-2006; utility water; PF:24
With a Taylor K2006 kit, you can test pH reliably up to about a chlorine level of 15. This is not true for other kits, though.
(It doesn't have anything to do with the pool's volume, by the way.)
I was just thinking that the water volume difference would have bearing on it, that's all.
Thank you, Watermom!
15' round 4.8K gal Intex AG pool; Intex 633 pump with twin canisters (2500 gph main filtering); Unicel 5315 filter cartridges; Intex 637 pump w/o filter (1000 gph heater circulation); 4hrs; K-2006; utility water; PF:24
Bookmarks