It will take 70-71 pounds to get you to 50 ppm Borates, not 85 pounds.
( (50-18)/18 ) * 40 = 71.
It will take 67 cups (4.2 gallons) of Muriatic Acid to compensate for the pH rise from the additional Borates. You can add them one after the other in batches (say, 10 pounds Borax, then 9.5 cups acid, etc.).
Preventing dissolving of plaster/gunite/grout surfaces requires saturation of the water with calcium carbonate. Over-saturation is not necessary and can lead to scaling or cloudiness. Being a little under-saturated is fine -- it's only when you are way out of balance that problems are seen (i.e. well out of the +/- 0.5 range for saturation index -- problems are usually not seen until at least 0.7 to 1.0 or higher in either direction). It is the combination of calcium and carbonate that is important -- not each individually. The reason is that it is calcium carbonate that is in plaster/gunite/grout and that dissolves -- this originally comes from limestone (which is calcium carbonate) and is used as part of the cement making process.
Richard
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