If you tested CYA on August 11, no need to do it again. Just wastes reagents.
If you tested CYA on August 11, no need to do it again. Just wastes reagents.
already tested everything at 12:30. CYA=150. FC=32, CC=0
however- pH is up to 7.8 today. it's been hovering around 7.6 for the past week.
15K gal, 15x30 rectangular, in-ground, vinyl liner, Pentair ¾ HP Whisperflo on 24/7, Pentair Cartridge Filter(CCP240), Heater (gas), Automatic Pool Cover
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Was the 32 FC result at 12:30 BEFORE adding anything?
In other words, is this scenario correct:
7:30 you were at FC 22; you added 2-1/2 jugs
12:30 retested FC and got 32. No additions from 7:30 to 12:30
I just want to make sure about this because if this scenario IS correct..... your results are promising.
You only have to do the “wait an hour and retest” at night when you’re trying to determine overnight chlorine loss. I wanted to make sure you understood the AT NIGHT part.
26K gal 20x40 rectangular IG vinyl pool; Apr 2014: New pump, liner, auto-cover, & water; Pentair Whisperflo 1HP pump; Pentair Trition sand filter; Cover/Star CS-500 auto cover; Taylor K-2006C; OTO
Please don't bypass my above post but I am going to bring up a side issue which has been bugging me all day. I had questions about your pool installer before but now.... Rainwater is bad? He said that? The overwhelming majority of outdoor pools are not covered in the rain. If rain was that "bad" for a pool, many pool owners would be in big trouble. I LOVE rainwater as it keeps me from having to fill from my iron-laded well water. Was the "rainwater is bad" part of a sales pitch to get you to purchase an expensive auto-cover? You have the best reason in the world to have an auto-cover: your son. Don't get me wrong. I have an auto-cover and love it! However, in my book, rainwater is a blessing!
p.s. Did this same installer say anything that made you hesitant about cleaning behind your lights?
Last edited by FormerBromineUser; 08-19-2014 at 09:08 PM.
26K gal 20x40 rectangular IG vinyl pool; Apr 2014: New pump, liner, auto-cover, & water; Pentair Whisperflo 1HP pump; Pentair Trition sand filter; Cover/Star CS-500 auto cover; Taylor K-2006C; OTO
Hi- I did look online yesterday and found some specific info on the possible negative effects of rainwater ( namely acid rain messing with the pH) . A chem geek guy gave a very detailed analysis about plausible scenarios - ie. what 1" of rain does to pH level.... required logarithm calls but results were negligible. I think the pool guy wanted to offer me the most maintenance free options and no rain water means less chance of algae and less vacuuming? ( and yes he did mention acid rain messing with the pool chemistry). Good to know I don't have to run out and close it all the time.
15K gal, 15x30 rectangular, in-ground, vinyl liner, Pentair ¾ HP Whisperflo on 24/7, Pentair Cartridge Filter(CCP240), Heater (gas), Automatic Pool Cover
Rain does usually drop my pH a bit, not usually enough to adjust. Big storms drop alot of leaves and sticks in my pool.
Did you get an overnight chlorine loss reading? What are the FC and CC measurments?
Ok- this mornings stats:
Last evening tested at 7:45. FC =30 CC=0.5 added 1 jug
re-tested at 9:00. FC=36
Tested again at 12:45. FC= 36. CC=0.5
This morning tested at 8:00 CL=28. CC=1. Added 1 jug
re-tested at 9:00 CL=33. CC=1
15K gal, 15x30 rectangular, in-ground, vinyl liner, Pentair ¾ HP Whisperflo on 24/7, Pentair Cartridge Filter(CCP240), Heater (gas), Automatic Pool Cover
26K gal 20x40 rectangular IG vinyl pool; Apr 2014: New pump, liner, auto-cover, & water; Pentair Whisperflo 1HP pump; Pentair Trition sand filter; Cover/Star CS-500 auto cover; Taylor K-2006C; OTO
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Huh???? I OPENED mine at 5-ish this morning so I could get the rain in my pool.
26K gal 20x40 rectangular IG vinyl pool; Apr 2014: New pump, liner, auto-cover, & water; Pentair Whisperflo 1HP pump; Pentair Trition sand filter; Cover/Star CS-500 auto cover; Taylor K-2006C; OTO
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