Re: Measuring Cyanuric Acid - can this help?
People get the precision (what is the test result number?) of a test mixed up with the accuracy (Is the result repeatable?) of a test all the time. Your number of 27.5 might seem precise but it is not necessisarily accurate. Ben spoke of this a bit on his Saturation Index calcualtor page.
http://www.poolsolutions.com/frm/calculator_SI.php
(Ignore the errors at the top of the page and scroll down to the section on Precision vs. Accuracy in Testing. If you enter values into the calculator and hit the submit button the errors will go away, btw.)
No matter how you cut it the CYA turbidity test is NOT a precise test. It is the most subjective of all the tests we commonly do on pools. Best advice is read it to the nearest line. The results you posted above ("Oh and I got it from doing repeated tests with a new Taylor kit eg. below 30, about 32, possibly 35, etc.") are all really 30 ppm. There is no way you could tell if the number is 32 or 35 since the divisions on the view tube are not divided into equal sized sections. Just because the dot disappears halfway between 30 and 40 does not mean the test is 35 ppm. It might be much closer to either 30 or 40 because the cloudiness does not necessarily form in a linear fashion between each graduation on the scale. If you test several times and it's closer to 30 than 40 then call it 30 ppm. It will be an accurate reading. To try and make it any more 'precise' than that is really just deluding yourself and complicating things.
Last edited by waterbear; 07-04-2008 at 10:02 PM.
Retired pool store and commercial pool maintenance guy.
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