Re: Salt Water Stain Removal
The company that makes the CuLator bags will also do water testing for you (for a nice fee, of course!). They will test both your fill water and your pool water if you send them samples and e-mail you a report. You could also buy a Taylor test kit for metals but they are kind of expensive and, at least for the Fe test, you need to know your ballpark concentration so you purchase the correct test kit.
This is my understanding of metal staining -
Ascorbic Acid (AA) - dissolves metal oxides that have come out of solution (due to high pH, high FC and/or both) and puts them back into your water as metal ions (a very long a expensive process but sometimes necessary).
Sequestrant - a metal complexing (or "chelating") agent (HEDP, EDTA, etc) that binds itself to a metal ion. The metal ions and chelating compound do not typically form a strong chemical bond and so it is possible that metal ions can stain as the sequestrant breaks down thus requiring constant additions of sequestrant on a regular basis to maintain a concentration that is adequate for keeping metal ions in solution.
Ion-exchange Resin (CuLator) - In "theory" the polymeric material in the CuLator bag acts a lot like the ion exchange resin in a home water softener. But, instead of calcium ions replacing sodium ions in the polymer resin and being bound there, the CuLator resin "binds" various different metal ions to itself. You can think of it like a localized sequestrant that you stick in your skimmer or filter basket.
The reason why I believe the CuLator is not very effective is because of a simple physical principle - if the the exchange resin is localized inside a bag you float in your skimmer, then practically speaking most of the water in your pool will flow around the bag and never come in contact with the resin. Sure you'll have diffusion of metal ions into the bag and given a high enough turn-over rate for your water you might bring more of it in contact with the bag, but that process will be very slow at best. The only way to make the CuLator resin material work in any meaningful way would be to build into an inline filtration system where ALL of your pool water is forced to flow through the CuLator material much like how a household water softener works. That, however, would require a very expensive setup almost akin to adding another "filter" unit to your pool plumbing.
Ultimately, if you have a high enough metal concentration in your pool water, your only options are - (1) use a regular dose of sequestrant to keep the metal ions in solution, OR (2) dump your pool water and refill with metal-free water and ensure that any auto-fill water source is free of metals. Once the swim season comes to a close here in my pool, I'll be spending the winter months looking at some minor stains on my plaster to see if metals are an issue...I really hope not because I'd hate to have to go through an AA treatment process and then be a regular Jack's Metal Magic user....
16k gal IG gunite PebbleTec (Caribbean Blue), 18' x 36' free form with raised spa/spillway and separate rock waterfall. All Pentair Equipment pad - 3HP IntelliFlo VS / 1.5HP WhisperFlo, MasterTemp 400k BTU/hr heater, QuadDE-100 filter, IC40 SWCG, IntelliTouch/EasyTouch Controls
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