Rotfl
You guys crack me up![]()
Happy Halloween![]()
Rotfl
You guys crack me up![]()
Happy Halloween![]()
Here's a picture of the cauldron after having a large chunk of dry ice just added to it. The "hand" coming out of the cauldron is a nice touch, don't you think? Boil, boil, toil and trouble!
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So I tried leaving my pool open and the pH still stayed pretty much the same. I then realized that I could use my pool cover pump that normally pumps water off of the pool cover and could attach its output hose to a portable plastic shower that I have and put the pump into the pool (it's a waterproof pump -- essentially like a sump pump). I had to take off the shower nozzle because it gave too much resistance to the water and shut down the pump, but with the nozzle off I was in business. The stream of water hitting the pool surface from about 6 feet in the air has given enough bubbles and aeration to cause the pH to noticeably rise -- about 0.1 for every 8 hours of aeration starting from around 7.1
Though I could have just added some base, I thought I'd just try outgassing the same CO2 that I had added with the dry ice.
I hope everyone had a Happy Halloween.
Richard
Here is a cheap way to aireate. Take a washing machine feed hose (about 1/2" id). Remove the coverplate and eyeball on one of the return jets from the pump and dry the cover plate. Use a copious amount duct tape to tape the hose so that end will be near the center of the eyeball and extend into the jet of water about 1-2" - you may need to form the hose slightly with some hot water so it points in the direction of the water flow. Don't tape around the back of the plate or you won't be able to put it back on. Put the coverplate and eyeball back in and lay the hose on the deck or rail of the pool. When you turn on the pump play with hose until you get the maximum amount of air coming out. You just made an eductor. You'll hear the air being sucked in and see a large stream of very fine bubbles. With this I could drive my alkalinity down in hours. Looks hokey, but heh - free and take it out when your done. And NO, I'm not red-green.
Dave,
I'm just trying to visualize this. So the end of the hose that is in the jet flow is pointed so that the open end is pointing away from the wall -- that is, it is pointing towards the direction of where the water is going, is that right?. The water jet creates lower pressure around it (the Venturi effect) and that sucks air in from the other end of the hose that is on the deck. Though I can see how this would work by using a focused jet into an exhaust pipe outlet where a "tap" to the side just behind the output of the focused jet would be at lower pressure (i.e. a water eductor), I think that would require something more complicated than what I think you were describing. Have you tried this? How do you control where the water jet is flowing? I tried just using a flexible hose in the jet stream, but it doesn't lower the pressure enough to suck in air (i.e. to overcome the foot or two of water between the jet and the water surface). The hose tends to divert the jet flow so I suspect I am missing something about your description in terms of how you maintain the jet flow to be directed and concentrated so that it flows past the hose end without getting diverted or disrupted. I can see how this works readily in a water eductor that is quite common, but I'm missing something about how the duct tape and hose combination replicated this.
Richard
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