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Thread: Does CYA 'degrade' at any sort of average rate?

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  1. #1
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    Default Re: Does CYA 'degrade' at any sort of average rate?

    If ammonia conversion were happening, wouldn't you register a high CC level?

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    ivyleager is offline Lifetime Member Weir Watcher ivyleager 0
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    Default Re: Does CYA 'degrade' at any sort of average rate?

    My CYA was 100ppm at the end of last season, and is still @ 100ppm. I haven't lost any. Been using bleach exclusively since last year. I am considering deliberate algae mess at end of this season to see if that will degrade any CYA.

    CaryB
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    Default Re: Does CYA 'degrade' at any sort of average rate?

    Quote Originally Posted by ivyleager
    My CYA was 100ppm at the end of last season, and is still @ 100ppm. I haven't lost any. Been using bleach exclusively since last year. I am considering deliberate algae mess at end of this season to see if that will degrade any CYA.

    CaryB
    Go 'Canes!!!

    Instead of a deliberate algae mess, why don't you just do a partial drain? If you drain half the water, that would put your cya down to about 50 which would be a good level.

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    Default Re: Does CYA 'degrade' at any sort of average rate?

    Quote Originally Posted by halds
    If ammonia conversion were happening, wouldn't you register a high CC level?
    According to Ben -- yes. That is why I said it is a mystery. I always open to a clear pool, no CC, no cya.

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    Default Re: Does CYA 'degrade' at any sort of average rate?

    Quote Originally Posted by Watermom
    According to Ben -- yes. That is why I said it is a mystery. I always open to a clear pool, no CC, no cya.
    In a complete denitrification the reaction will proceed all the way to nitrogen gas which will leave the water. This ususally does not seem to occur in pools but is certainly possible. This anoerbic dinitrification is used in aquariums successfuly with dinitrification filters that control the process so it always proceeds to nitrogen gas. However if they malfunction they produce a LOT of ammoinia which then can kill the livestock in the tank. I suspect in most pools the conditions just aren't right for the process to procede all the way. It is not algae that cause the denitrification. Algae is aerobic (needs oxygen) There are several speicies of anerobic bacteria that are ususally found in soil and in sedemint in ponds, lakes, and oceans that do the denitrification. They need still or VERY SLOWLY moving water (pool pump off), darkness (cover on pool), and no oxygen (consumed by any algae growth, most likely, and once again, no water circulaton) for the process to go to completion and usually a source of sugars or alcohols for food to speed the process up. I suspect the latter is what is missing in most closed pools that exhibit anoerbic denitrification.
    Last edited by waterbear; 06-16-2006 at 02:20 PM.
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    p.p.h. is offline ** No working email address ** p.p.h. 0
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    Default Re: Does CYA 'degrade' at any sort of average rate?

    I lost 40ppm CYA in a matter of months after my initial fill in late March. I've backwashed probably about 5 times and now we got alot of swimmers but 40 ppm lost is alot, thats half my pool drained!!! Same test kit used for initial test and the recent tests.

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    Default Re: Does CYA 'degrade' at any sort of average rate?

    So, cleaning off the cartridge filter can make it go away too? The instructions always said to avoid cleaning the filter for 3-5 days after adding the CYA to the pool. I figured by then it would be in your system enough that additional filter cleanings wouldn't make that much of a difference to the ppm.

    No wonder we have such a hard time holding stabilizer. Our pool gets a lot of junk in it, so we have to clean the filter quite a bit. We're at 35ppm now, but I just washed the filter yesterday. Is it a good idea to check the CYA after cleaning/backwashing the filter?

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    Default Re: Does CYA 'degrade' at any sort of average rate?

    Cleaning the filter can make you lose your cya if you have recently added it. But, really, after about a week or so, the cya should have all dissolved and from then on, cleaning the filter should have no effect on cya levels.

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    Default Re: Does CYA 'degrade' at any sort of average rate?

    As a side note, trichlor is probably more successful with sand filters because the constant backwashing keeps diluting the pool and the cya level doesn't rise as fast. With a cartridge filter and trichlor it can only be a matter of months before the cya is way too high. I have personally seen these trends in the testing histories of the customers at the pool store I work at.
    Retired pool store and commercial pool maintenance guy.

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    Default Re: Does CYA 'degrade' at any sort of average rate?

    If one can get their CYA levels to decrease on their own, I would say they are lucky!

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