Though medvampire may be correct that other factors may be inhibiting changes in pH in the well water, my guess would be that well water is continually getting saturated with carbonates from the ground that it is in (or flowing through) and that it isn't well exposed or aerated with air which is why it can stay so far out of balance. The 7.5 pH and 320 TA combination gives a relative CO2 outgas rate of about 35 which is quite high. So yes, I would guess that aerating the water as you added it would release some of the CO2 in the process -- but I really can't tell you how much or if it would be worth doing (this is something you could experiment with and let us know your results). You could also add acid to the well water you will be adding to your pool (and then aerate it), but might then need to add back some base before or after this water is put into your pool. I would think it would be whole lot easier to acidify and aerate a small amount of water BEFORE it gets into your pool rather than having to try and lower the TA of the entire pool itself (referring to small refills, of course -- with an initial fill you don't have a choice).Originally Posted by dafletcha
By the way, having the pH rise to just 7.8 reduces the relative outgas rate to about 17 or around half so this is a sensitive process to pH. And this isn't perfect science so keep us posted with your results and good luck!
Richard
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