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Thread: You guys are gonna love this...

  1. #1
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    Default You guys are gonna love this...

    My mom and I both have IG Vinyl pools, mine is slightly larger but roughly the same size. We have been in disagreement over how to maintain them since I found this site and went to the BBB method. She uses a service to come out and clean her pool and adjust the chemistry, and they charge her $45/week...let me repeat...**$45 A WEEK!!** AND she has to buy her own chemicals.

    The other day I went over and she had to run to the pool store to get calcium increaser because the pool people told her it was low. I asked her why she had to put calcium in her vinyl pool and she said she didn't know, just that they said so. I told her to ask them what the calcium was for, and she did so. They told her it keeps her liner from getting brittle! Such BS, but she thinks since they are "professionals" they know what they are doing, and I can't convince her otherwise.

    I asked her to pay me $45/wk and I would do it and buy the chemicals, but she would rather rely on the "pros". Sigh...
    Last edited by tado921; 06-03-2006 at 07:21 AM.

  2. #2
    gregugadawg Guest

    Default Re: You guys are gonna love this...

    i am kind of confused how you guys can say calcium isn't needed in a vinyl pool. If you look at every vinyl seller in the country they will tell you that you need a balanced calcium level in the water. These are people who simply sell liners and have no reason to push chemicals sales. Also very soft water is going to be corrosive so you will end up replacing your pump seal every year and if you don't get that replaced then you will end up with a new motor every few years. It is amazing how people refuse to add a 30 dollar bucket of calcium that will last them all summer but they will compromise their $2500 liner or their $400 pump.

  3. #3
    duraleigh Guest

    Default Re: You guys are gonna love this...

    Greg,

    It's not clear to me how water without calcium is harmful to my pump. I always thought the white spots that formed on metals immersed in water were calcium deposits.

    How much calcium do I need for a "balanced calcium level"?

  4. #4
    gregugadawg Guest

    Default Re: You guys are gonna love this...

    On a vinyl pool you can keep it around the 150 range, inside of your pump there is a mechanical seal which keeps the water from hitting the back of the motor. With corrosive water this will rust causing water to eventually leak which also means water is getting in the shaft.

  5. #5
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    Default Re: You guys are gonna love this...

    I can understand how there is need for some calcium in the pool for the pump...i'm just not exactly sure how the liner needs it too.

    Michael

  6. #6
    gregugadawg Guest

    Default Re: You guys are gonna love this...

    nah i wouldnt necessarily say the liner needs it, I am just in atlanta here and the ch out of the tap is 80 ppm, i tend to get it to about 250 in a gunite pool, 150 for vinyl and fiberglass and 150 for spas. I wouldn't say it affects the liner but I did look on some major manufacturers of liners and they said to keep it 100-200. I know most places in the country arent gonna be 50-80 out of the tap like we are here.

  7. #7
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    Default Re: You guys are gonna love this...

    I do remember now Ben saying at one time that certain liners require a small bit of calcium in the water. I also did do a bit of playing around with the langelier saturation index, and if you subscribe that it's correct, it's impossible to stay out of the corrosive range without any Ca in the water. It seems that 100 - 150 is the range that keeps the index happy. I haven't researched it really all that hard, but I think i'm going to hit up some mechanical and chemical engineers at work tomorrow and see what they have to say.

    Michael

  8. #8
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    Default Re: You guys are gonna love this...

    Greg,
    Please explain to me how water without calcium is corrosive, but water with calcium is not.

    I understand how high salt levels can be corrosive, how non-neutral pH can be be corrosive and how too much chlorine can be corrosive.

    I also understand how a leechable chemical that is present in one environment, like the calcium in concrete or plaster pools will be dissolved by water that lacks calcium. Therefore calcium in the water presents a saturation to prevent it dissolving from the concrete or plaster.

    But please explain to me how the vinyl will be damaged by low calcium if the other chemicals in the water are balanced? Exactly what elements react with the vinyl and how does the calcium prevent it?

    Oh, and I keep my water VERY light on calcium and have YET to require a pump seal.

    Oh, and by the way, I'm moving this thread to the China Shop.
    Last edited by CarlD; 06-04-2006 at 02:21 PM.
    Carl

  9. #9
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    Default Re: You guys are gonna love this...

    Quote Originally Posted by gregugadawg
    On a vinyl pool you can keep it around the 150 range, inside of your pump there is a mechanical seal which keeps the water from hitting the back of the motor. With corrosive water this will rust causing water to eventually leak which also means water is getting in the shaft.
    Unfortunately, till I get caught up on kits, I can't pursue this issue. I'll try to get back to it in a week or so.

    Meanwhile, Greg, I'm going to have to disable your registration. I'd asked you to back off, and read some of the PoolSolutions stuff before posting. Now, I've got some complaints, and a quick check shows you posting stuff that I've identified for years as TEKTATs (Things Everybody Knows That Aren't True). You can debate me on those points, in this section, but you can't post those sorts of things till you've done the debate.

    (For starters, Professor Langlier did NOT think his index was applicable to pools, AND the product engineer with Canadian General (one of the major mfgs of vinyl sheet for pools) had never seen any evidence to support the calcium in vinyl pools recommendations.)

    Regarding calcium:
    • Calcium is NOT necessary for vinyl pools;
    • Lack of calcium does NOT cause stainless steel seals to rust,
    • Nor, does the presence of calcium decrease the corrosivity of water under the conditions that exist in pools, outside of heaters.
    • Calcium's presence INCREASES the likelihood of damage to copper heat exchangers;
    • etc.
    I've done this debate many times before, but unfortunately, those archives are gone. I'll resurrect some of those this coming winter, but probably not before. But, once I have time to deal with this, I'll re-enable your registration and email you to let you know I've done so, and then we can duke it out here.

    For everyone else . . . here are some of the relevant PoolSolutions pages:

    http://www.poolsolutions.com/tips/tip72.html

    http://www.poolsolutions.com/gd/chem_never.html

    http://www.poolsolutions.com/tips/tip03.html

    Ben

  10. #10
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    Default Re: You guys are gonna love this...

    Wow, I didn't think this would cause a controversy.

    I can see where Greg would have a hard time letting go of some of the "old school" thinking, because my mom just refuses to believe it will work even though the evidence is right before her eyes. My pool stays just as clear and clean as hers, at less than 1/3 the cost. Therefore, the reasoning that calcium is not needed in a vinyl pool makes sense as well, given the explanation provided.

    When I first found this site I was a bit skeptical myself, but what Ben was saying seemed logical, so I went with it. I'm glad I did, and I'll add my opinion to the many others: The BBB method works, thanks a million!!

    Tad
    Last edited by Watermom; 06-06-2006 at 11:53 PM.

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