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Thread: OTO and CYA and TC, oh my! What's being measured?

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    Default Re: OTO and CYA and TC, oh my! What's being measured?

    OTO is just measuring your TC. If the CYA is low then your FC will be burned off by sunlight. If you monitor the FC throughout the day you can see the effect. It is the FC that is the sanitizer. CC is more stable in sunlight and will not burn off as quickly but it is not an effective sanitizer. In fact, early attempts at stabilizing chlorine sometimes used anhydrous ammonia added to the pool to form monochloramine which is more stable than FC in sunlight!
    Retired pool store and commercial pool maintenance guy.

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    Default Re: OTO and CYA and TC, oh my! What's being measured?

    Quote Originally Posted by waterbear
    OTO is just measuring your TC. If the CYA is low then your FC will be burned off by sunlight. If you monitor the FC throughout the day you can see the effect. It is the FC that is the sanitizer.
    Thanks,

    I guess that's the heart of my confusion. How does CYA work? Does it take the chlorine -completely- out of service, and out of detection by the OTO test kit, or does it just release it more slowly in the presence of sunlight? In brand new fresh water like I now have, it's doubtful there is any CC, so TC=FC?

    TW

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    Default Re: OTO and CYA and TC, oh my! What's being measured?

    The only wat to tell if you have any CC is to use a DPD test or an FAS-DPD titration test.

    The way CYA works is that it combines with the chlorine to form cloroisocyanurates in the water. These will test as FC but they do not have the oxidizing power of hypochlorous acid.. This combining is not complete if the CYA and FC levels are kept in the recommended ranges so there is some FC available. When the CYA is too high then most of the FC is combined unless you raise the level with unstabilized chlorine. (This is an oversimplification but it gives you the idea.) CYA has no effect on an OTO, DPD, or FAS-DPD test since the combined chlorine it produces will test as FC on DPD and FAS-DPD and as part of the TC on an OTO test.
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    Default Re: OTO and CYA and TC, oh my! What's being measured?

    Quote Originally Posted by aquarium
    Thanks,

    I guess that's the heart of my confusion. How does CYA work? Does it take the chlorine -completely- out of service, and out of detection by the OTO test kit, or does it just release it more slowly in the presence of sunlight? In brand new fresh water like I now have, it's doubtful there is any CC, so TC=FC?

    TW

    CYA doesn't affect your test readings. Its function is to protect clorine from being consumed by the sunlight. To do this, it makes the chlorine less active. You can't assume anything about the chlorine in your tap water until you test it.

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    Default Re: OTO and CYA and TC, oh my! What's being measured?

    You can think of it like this -The cya is what binds to the chlorine, so if there is too much cya verses not enough chlorine, there will not be any "free chlorine" to fight with problems. If there is not enough "binded chlorine" then your chlorine will be used up by the sun and you won't have any protection. "free chlorine" gets used up by the sun. The "free chlorine" is the "strong" chlorine, the chlorine that is binded with the cya is there to keep the water clean - but if there isn't enough of the "strong" chlorine to attack, then you will have problems. That's why some people can keep thier pool ok for a while with a high cya and low chlorine - a big enough problem didn't start yet, but the opportunity is always there. Keeping enough free chlorine is what you want to keep your pool safe from the "attackers"
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    Default Re: OTO and CYA and TC, oh my! What's being measured?

    Okay, got it.

    I'm actually trying to run the pool with very low CYA (about 10ppm) so I can also run relatively low chlorine - 2-3ppm per the OTO kit. I have the pump (with auto-chlorinator) set on a timer so it's adding chlorine during the day. So far it looks like it holds the chlorine level constant both day and night - I'm testing AM and PM to set the chlorinator. I'd like to find NONstabilized trichlor pucks but so far no luck.

    Thanks Everyone!

    TW

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    Default Re: OTO and CYA and TC, oh my! What's being measured?

    There are no non-stabilized trichlor pucks.......

    There are non-stabilized cal-hypo pucks, but you can't use them in a trichlor feeder, and since hth changed the packaging and removed the plastic capsule they're junk anyway because they go to mush within 12 hours.

    Janet

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    Default Re: OTO and CYA and TC, oh my! What's being measured?

    Thanks Janet,

    Yeah, and we have -very- high calcium hardness here, so I don't want to add more.

    Just took a couple of tests at high noon here. I can see the dip in the chlorine when taken across the pool from the returns, so the low CYA is having the expected effect. Near the returns it's almost up where I want it. I'm letting the pump/chlorinator run a couple of hours after the sun is off to punch it back up for the night.

    The way it's set now a single 8 ounce puck will last most of a week. (15,000 gallon IG concrete) Before this water change I was going through nearly one a day.

    Tom

    PS: It's not a 'pressurized' chlorine system, just a vertical PVC pipe with water in/out and a ball valve, with the pucks inside. I think it's also called an erosion type feeder.
    Last edited by aquarium; 06-13-2006 at 04:14 PM.

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    Default Re: OTO and CYA and TC, oh my! What's being measured?

    the problem you are going to run into as you continue to use trichlor is that your CYA will continue to rise and as it does you will have to run your chlorine at a higher level to compensate which will cause your CYA to rise even faster. That is the downside to using stabilzed chlorine. That is also the reason most of us here in the forum use bleach (sodium hypochlorite) for our chlorine source.

    Trichlor is actually a compound made from cyanuric acid and chlorine and when it dissolves it forms some hypochlorious acid (unstabilized chlorine), some cyanuric acid and some chloroisocyanurates (stabilized chlorine). These componants will be in equalibrim depending on the amount of cyanuric acid in the water. the higher the CYA less hypochlorous acid and more cloroisocyanurate are formed. It is a losing battle that will eventually force you to either switch exclusively to unstabilized chlorine or to drain and refill the pool and start over!
    Last edited by waterbear; 06-13-2006 at 07:29 PM.
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    Default Re: OTO and CYA and TC, oh my! What's being measured?

    Quote Originally Posted by aquarium
    PS: It's not a 'pressurized' chlorine system, just a vertical PVC pipe with water in/out and a ball valve, with the pucks inside. I think it's also called an erosion type feeder.
    Ahhhh ok. I see what you are saying now. Well, I won't repeat what waterbear said, because he hit it right on the head.

    Michael

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