Thanks, Evan. Is cobalting the same thing as blistering?
Tisha
Thanks, Evan. Is cobalting the same thing as blistering?
Tisha
not really. cobalt staining looks like little black or dark grey dots that get bigger and sometimes have a brownish ring around them.
Retired pool store and commercial pool maintenance guy.
Evan's right. Central target numbers on pools are safe on all chlorine-based pools (I know little about bromine and other non-chlorine pools).
The main reasons we tell people to follow different numbers for Calcium and Total Alkalinity on vinyl pools is:
1) Cost savings
2) Swings in measurements.
For example: a Concrete or plastered pool should have a calcium level of 200 to 400ppm
But your F/G pool needs less, and a vinyl pool doesn't really need any--so why should a vinyl pool owner spend $40 adding calcium that isn't needed?
Total Alk is touchier in concrete/plaster pools--125ppm is the max recommended level. But in vinyl (and probably in F/G) you can safely go to 180, and only at 200ppm should you ACTIVELY lower T/A.
Vinyl pools, however, are FAR more sensitive to low pH--it can damage the vinyl shortening its life. So if I had a concrete pool and pH was 6, I wouldn't worry, I'd just raise it. But in a vinyl pool I'd be dumping in boxes of Borax RIGHT NOW! (so my vinyl doesn't melt).
Finally, there's the numbers for SWGs. They aren't QUITE the same, but that's for a different thread!![]()
Carl
Thanks guys. I love this forum.
Bookmarks