I have a 5lbs container of CYA from Home Depot. I measured the volume to be about 10.5 cups so the density is close to 2270/2478 = .92 g/ml which is pretty far off of theoretical. The granuals are fairly large which might account for the difference.
I have a 5lbs container of CYA from Home Depot. I measured the volume to be about 10.5 cups so the density is close to 2270/2478 = .92 g/ml which is pretty far off of theoretical. The granuals are fairly large which might account for the difference.
Mark
Hydraulics 101; Pump Ed 101; Pump/Pool Spreadsheets; Pump Run Time Study; DIY Acid Dosing; DIY Cover Roller
18'x36' 20k plaster, MaxFlo SP2303VSP, Aqualogic PS8 SWCG, 420 sq-ft Cartridge, Solar, 6 jet spa, 1 HP jet pump, 400k BTU NG Heater
Thanks Richard this is most helpful.
Since I started at a cya of 0 this year and have a 30K+ pool I will need a lot of pucks to get to 40-50. Your analysis also explains the modest increase in cya I have seen to date after 20 pucks.
One advantage of bringing up the cya slowly with pucks, is that the FC that I can maintained consistently is 4.5-8 (depending on the number of pucks used simultaneously) and this is a very effective algaecide at the low cyas seen early after opening. My pool is always green and murky on opening no matter how good the cover is (the joys of being surrounded by large trees), but is crystal clear at the end of 7 days after lots of chemicals and the mega puck approach (no matter how poor the pool company is!). Assuming my cya drops again during next winter, this seems a reasonable approach to recuscitation in the spring.
Thanks again
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