not really. cobalt staining looks like little black or dark grey dots that get bigger and sometimes have a brownish ring around them.
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.
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