Re: Big mistake in trying to raise pH... please help!

Originally Posted by
JWB
Hi,
It didn't dissolve well and the majority of it ended up on the pool bottom as a blue silt.
The blue color could be an indication of copper in your pool and you might have precipitated cupric carbonate (copper carbonate).
The chlorine level is off the charts. pH is up to 6.8 but I can't get a TA reading with my kit (water goes yellow but won't go red) and this worries me.
Thanks
Vinyl lined 16'x32' inground
DE Filter
Super Pump II
Hayward Navigator vac
If the chlorine levels are very high it is normal for the TA test to go from blue to yellow instead of green to red since one of the indicators gets bleached out. The colors are on the pale side so it's harder to see your endpoint but the results are valid. If it starts out yellow and your pH is reading 6.8 with very high chlorine levels then your pH IS very low. The question is how did it get so low. Adding liquid chlorine or cal hypo shock would not cause that but the use of trichlor could.
The only other way your pH and TA could crash is by overdosing on acid.
Retired pool store and commercial pool maintenance guy.
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