Re: HOT TUBS: Calcium (and Bromine)
The main reason that calcium is needed in hot tubs is that most portable hot tub "skid packs" include electric heaters with copper heat exchanger tubes. Also gas hot tub heaters ususally use copper heat exchangers also. Some hardness to the water is necessary to help prevent leaching copper into the water...same as in a pool.
The reason bromine is ususally suggested in hot tubs (It IS more expensive) is because it is supposed to be more stable at the higher temps and is supposed to be more effective over a higher pH range. I suspect it is less affected by the constant aeration of the water from the bubblers and air injectors but am not really sure. I do know it is easer to maintain the bromine levels with less work than chlorine levels. I have kept hot tubs on both bromine and chlorine.
Most people, including many dealers do NOT know how to use bromine properly. It is different than chlorine. You need to add sodium bromide at each fill to create the bromine bank in the water. An oxidizer is used to convert the bromine ions to hypobromous acid. Plain old bleach is an excellent oxizider for this purpose and will not cause the pH drop that MPS tends to cause. Bromine itself seems to cause the pH and Alk to drop so you need to keep closer tabs on this than when using chlorine.
IF you are doing a 2 step bromine you add the sodium bromide to the water and then 'shock' (add oxidizer) to create the hypobromous acid with either chlorine, MPS, or ozone. The tub should be shocked with each use. When shocking no longer raises the bromine levels you need to add more sodium bromide or drain and refill and start over.
IF you are using a 3 step bromine you add bromine tablets in a floater to the above 2 step system. The tablets contain both bromine and chlorine or bromine and MPS. They help to maintain a more constant bromine level. You still need to add the sodium bromide and shock or it can take weeks for enough bromine reserve to be in the water since the bromine tablets are very slow dissolving. It is still recommended to shock once a week which will raise the bromine levels very high and help sanitize the water. I always kept my bromine levels 6-8 ppm.
An outdoor hot tub using chlorine does need CYA and this is why dichlor is ususally used as the chlorinating chemical. For indoor hot tubs Cal Hypo and liquid chlorine are ususally used.
Most hot tubs are covered when not in use (in a perfect world!) so, in theory, degredation of the chlorine from sunlight is not supposed to be an issue! However, I know many people leave their tubs uncovered for periods of time and also use them during the day so the effects of UV light do become an issue.
Maintaining chlorine levels in a hot tub do require more work and daily testing is a good idea. Play close attention to combined chlorine and shock when necessary. (Or maintain a level of MPS in the water at all times for an indoor tub on chlorine and remember to keep tabs on your pH since MPS will tend to lower it) My current hot tub is not covered but is chlorinated by my SWG and shares the filtration equipment with my pool so I just have my SWG chlorinating my hot tub to a higher level than my pool (I keep it at 6 ppm) and have not had any problems.
TDS might play a more important role in hot tubs than pools since it is a much smaller volume of water and so many chems are used if you follow the dealers advice. Then again I have seen hot tubs that were recently filled and all the chems added that had TDS that indicated draining was in order even though the tubs were clear, not foaming, and sanitizer levels and all other parameters were perfect so I still think it is a bogus measurement! I do not think all of the defoamers, seqesterants, hardness increasers, clarifies,etc. the dealers try to sell are necessary. If you balance the water with baking soda, calcium if needed (my feeling is anything in the neighborhood of 100 ppm or higher is fine to protect the heater), borax to raise pH and dry acid to lower it (muriatic acid is hard to use in most hot tubs because of the small volume of water....It is usually needed in teaspoons and tablespoons and I personally don't want to measure that small amount of it out of a gallon jug!), then adjust your santizer and keep tabs on your water chemistry you will not need all the other stuff.
IF you do have metals in your fill water then a sequesteant is needed.
Final thing, Hot tubs should be drained and refilled every 1-3 months depending on bather load. Foaming is usually a good indicator of when this is necessary.
I have done a lot of research on hot tub chemistry and the above is what I have been able to find that seems to make sense based on my understanding of the chemistry involved and my own experiences (and that of my customers with hot tubs)
Last edited by waterbear; 08-11-2006 at 02:16 PM.
Retired pool store and commercial pool maintenance guy.
Bookmarks