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Thread: Calcium

  1. #31
    waterbear's Avatar
    waterbear is offline Lifetime Member Sniggle Mechanic waterbear 4 stars waterbear 4 stars waterbear 4 stars waterbear 4 stars
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    Default Re: Calcium

    Quote Originally Posted by cpoz06
    Stumbled across this discussion last nite and felt it necessary to add some
    insite. I have held a public pool operators certificate for 10 years and i am appalled at the lack of understanding of the basics of pool chemistry on this site. The first thing that you missed is that lime is extremely CAUSTIC!!!, AKA alkaline! If you really want to destroy your systems this is a great first step.

    What I see here is that you folks just want to back door your local pool store operator for a few bucks savings on a product that is one of the most consistent items in pool water balance.

    If you cant manage an average size pool for between 7 and 10 dollars per
    week working with a reputable pool store you need to get rid of the pool!

    I regularly talk to several of the store owners in my area who have invested a large part of their lives to teach people to manage their pool, and are the first ones you turn to when you cant fix it by groping around here.

    I wonder how some of you would feel if the customers that pay your daily wage started to figure out how not to pay you for th skill set you chose to earn a living!
    First of all I probably have a better understanding than you do of the chemistry of pool water and if you care to debate me please start a thread in the 'china shop' section of the forum. The Administrator of this forum has even greater knowledge of the chemistry than I do!.
    As far as the post about lime. If you read the replies it was answered! Lime is another name for calcium carbonate...also called chalk. You might know it as scale...you know, the stuff you have to scrape off with a pumice stone when you are cleaning one of the pools you service (or are you smart enough to use a mixture of pool soap and muriatic acid to do the job?) As far as being a caustic chemical....it is regularly used as a calcium additive in salt water reef aquariums. Once it is mixed with water it in a superstaturated solution it is called 'kalkwasser' (German for calcium water). If it was so caustic, as you put it, it would cetainly kill all the delicate livestock in a marine tank! I have been using it in my tanks for about 30 years now and also use calcium chloride so I know a bit about this!
    As far as the neighborhood pool store I happen to work in one! There is more misinformation given to people in pool store and from product manufacturers than good advice!
    As far as the topic of this thread, it concerns calcium. If you operate commercial pools I am sure that you know that calcium chloride is calcium chloride! Dow is one of the largest manufacturers of this chemical and on their website they have a section on pools and spa where they say that their DowFlake brand is what is used for pools. Dowflake is sold in large bags very cheaply to consumers as a de icer. It is exactly the same as the Dowflake that products companies buy in bulk and repackage to be sold in pool stores at inflated prices.....Ditto for Church and Dwight Co. sodium bicarbonate...It is cheaper to buy the Arm and Hammer branded baking soda then even their own Alkalinity First branded for swimming pools! Do you want to discuss sodium carbonate? How about sodium hypochlorite. Tell me what the difference is between 6% sodium hypo sold at a pool store (and yes, some of them DO sell 6%) as liquid chlorine or 6% sodium hypo sold at a grocery store as laundry bleach, other than price!

    The fact that you have been a CPO for 10 years doesn't mean much. It means that you know that OTO is not allowed for testing chlorine and DPD or FAS-DPD is and you know how to fill out a fecal accident report. It means you have been given a very general overview on such topics as ORP controllers and had to do some calulations of pool volume and dosing of chems and that you learned a way to reduce carbonate hardness (you probably know it as Total Alkalinity) that does NOT work properly because it goes against known chemical principles of buffer systems. (Total alkalinity is just another name for the carbonic acid/bicarbonate/carbonate buffer system in the pool water that helps pH from drifting....Do you understand the chemisty of buffer systems?)
    I suggest that you take some time and read through the forum..read through the sister website www.poolsolutions.com and learn what we are all about here before getting critical. You will find that this site teaches proper pool maintenance and that we have a lot of 'newbies' who ask questions that get addressed by more experiences users and also by industry professionals that participate on this site!

    As far as your statement "I wonder how some of you would feel if the customers that pay your daily wage started to figure out how not to pay you for (sic)th skill set you chose to earn a living!"
    I am in a very good position to answer that. I also have held Barber and Cosmetologist licenses for the past 30 years. Every day people are buying hair color, permenents, hair clippers, shaving cream and razors, makeup, manicuring impliments, etc. and using them at home! These definately had the potential to allow them 'not to pay me for (one of) the skill sets I chose to earn a living". My answer was to provide a level of expertise and service that they could not achieve on their own and I was very successful at that profession because of that. If more pool stores took that approach then maybe they wouldn't need to view naive customers as an unlimited money source and there would be more pools out there that did NOT have the amount of problems with water balance that seem to be far too commen amoung the average pool store customer! The answer to that is better education of pool industry personel and consumers....and that is one of the aims of this forum!

    Oh, and by the way ....you misspelled 'insight'! INSITE is an acronym for Integrated Network System Interface Terminal Equipment.
    Last edited by waterbear; 07-01-2006 at 12:03 AM.
    Retired pool store and commercial pool maintenance guy.

  2. #32
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    Default Re: Calcium

    cpoz06,


    Quote Originally Posted by cpoz06
    What I see here is that you folks just want to back door your local pool store operator for a few bucks savings on a product that is one of the most consistent items in pool water balance.
    I disagree! I did NOT come here to 'back door' my local pool store. I came here seeking knowledge on maintaining my pool! I find that this place is FULL of knowledge. It helped me learn to maintain my pool easily and cost effectively.

    Quote Originally Posted by cpoz06
    If you cant manage an average size pool for between 7 and 10 dollars per
    week working with a reputable pool store you need to get rid of the pool!
    A bit harsh don't you think? Maybe it is the pool store that we should 'get rid of' if we can't do what you suggest. After all, it is that pool store that is telling us what to do and buy. Are they not?

    Quote Originally Posted by cpoz06
    I regularly talk to several of the store owners in my area who have invested a large part of their lives to teach people to manage their pool, and are the first ones you turn to when you cant fix it by groping around here.
    Again, I disagree. From what I have seen here, it would look like this is the place to turn after the pool store couldn't fix it.

    Quote Originally Posted by cpoz06
    I wonder how some of you would feel if the customers that pay your daily wage started to figure out how not to pay you for th skill set you chose to earn a living!
    Maybe find a new skill set?

    I don't really feel that bad if the local pool store, or any store for that matter, doesn't get all of my money. I don't work to give away my money just because I feel sorry for the guy down the road. They chose their profession, I didn't choose it for them. Besides, they do get some of my money. I buy parts from them.

    In my chosen profession, if my customers found a better way to do what I provide for them, well, THEY just switched professions. Oh wait, my customers don't actually pay me.
    ~Dr. Spike

    Pool: IG vinyl, heated, fully enclosed (dome)
    Shape: Grecian (rectangular)
    Size: 20'W x 40'L
    Depth: 4' / 8'
    Filter: Sand w/DE added
    Other: 6' Diving Board
    Maintenance: BBB! Ben's PS234 kit! Manual vacuum, brush, and Pool Buster Max CG Gold

  3. #33
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    Default Re: Calcium

    I have a question. I have hth droptest kit from walmart. When I do the calcium hardness test, it asks to put 5 drops of hardness indicator in 25 ml of pool water. It says that it should turn red. mine turns yellow. what does that mean? is it too low? too high? does it really matter considering i have a vinyl liner AG pool?

  4. #34
    CarlD's Avatar
    CarlD is offline SuperMod Emeritus Vortex Adjuster CarlD 4 stars CarlD 4 stars CarlD 4 stars CarlD 4 stars CarlD 4 stars CarlD 4 stars
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    Default Re: Calcium

    Quote Originally Posted by gordyjamz
    I have a question. I have hth droptest kit from walmart. When I do the calcium hardness test, it asks to put 5 drops of hardness indicator in 25 ml of pool water. It says that it should turn red. mine turns yellow. what does that mean? is it too low? too high? does it really matter considering i have a vinyl liner AG pool?
    Does it then turn blue when you add the drops of the re-agent?

    I don't trust my memory on this, but I THINK it means there's something like copper or iron in your water as well--but that the test is still valid. With a vinyl pool any calcium setting from 0 to 500 is OK. Essentially, you don't have to worry about it. I check calcium 2 or 3 times a season, just to be sure.
    Carl

  5. #35
    SoCalBoo is offline Registered+ Thread Analyst SoCalBoo 0
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    Default Re: Calcium

    "I wonder how some of you would feel if the customers that pay your daily wage started to figure out how not to pay you for th skill set you chose to earn a living!"

    I am still laughing. So because we learn something, we aren't supposed to use it because someone else knows the same thing and we should continue to pay them to do it even though we know how...for a lot less money? So I should continue to pay a gardener $100/mo to mow my lawn even though I know how? So I should pay a plumber $150 to set up a new washer, even though I know how? So I should continue to pay a pool store exorbinate prices for the same (if not lesser - TA up v. arm and hammer baking soda anyone? pharmaceutical grade v. industrial grade?) chemicals? So I should continue to pay a pool service tech $100/mo for coming once a week when I can do it myself? Sorry, the logical totally escapes me.

    I am an attorney by trade, and I have a number of people come in my doors who could handle their problems on their own with a little bit of info, or they can pay me $$$/hr. to do it for them. I even educate some on how to do it themselves for free. I don't pay for advertising and referrals are all word of mouth. It is amazing to see how many of those that do it themselves come back with more complicated issues down the road and then do pay me. It is a solid business model that pays dividends for most industries. Always putting your hand out for payment and whinning when people learn how to do things themselves efficiently and reasonably does little good and actually turns people off.

    Of course, just my opinion.

    I've run the chemical analysis given on this site by a buddy has a Ph.D. in chemistry and has set up and run labs for Yale, Harvard and UCSD, who also owns a pool. He says he uses the same principals himself as are expressed herein and that the chemistry is solid.

    The pool chemical industry is just flat out ripping off consumers. To defend this practice is unconscionable. I see nothing redeemable about the practice in anyway.

    Other than that, have a nice day!

  6. #36
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    Default Re: Calcium

    It turns a clear grey color, i don't thinks theres that much copper in the water since I have blonde hair that hasn't turned green yet

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