I haven't heard of that high of a cya either. That is why I suggested that you might want to have another test. Good luck. Let us know if you have any more questions.
I would be curious how the CYA was tested. Most pool stores, at least in my area, use the plastic cylinder with the plastic graduated spoon that slides up and down and has the black dot in the bottom. The accuracy falls off at about 100 or so. After that, one pool store worker admitted that they just guess. I have learned never to trust one pool store. I get multiple samples and multiple readings. The only down fall is now trying to figure out who to believe. So the more I read on this Forum, You almost have to learn and do your own tesing.
Learning a little about pool chemistry, getting to know your own pool and how it behaves, and doing your own testing are major aspects of the BBB method. There's no "almost" about it
The very best investment we can make is in a good test kit, then test all the water you can lay your hands on: tap water, bottled water, your pool, your neighbor's pool, the drinking fountain at church, anything. This is how you learn to use the kit. Follow the instructions, learn to interpret the results in relation to your own pool, trust yourself.
Don't forget to test your fill water so you know what goes in the pool.
This got a little away from the high CYA post at the beginning, my apologies, but I really am passionate about the importance of gaining and using knowledge.
Oval 12.5K gal AGP; Hayward 19" sand filter; Pentair Dyn 1 HP 2sp pump on timer
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Point well made AnnaK. I agree with learning and understanding not only your pool, but your entire system. I am just starting to learn and understand my new salt system and how everything works in harmony.
Getting back to the High CYA reading, I would almost bet that there is/was a decimal point missing. If Utahpool is close to his 14,500 gallon estimate, someone would have had to dump 30-40 lbs of CYA into the pool to get those readings.
Last edited by BigTallGuy; 05-24-2010 at 10:17 AM.
Got a retest at a different store, this time they said 200 ppm CYA. So draining would seem to be my best choice. Going to buy the Taylor kit and do my own. Once I get it sorted out, I'll then resort to the BBB method. The cost of conventional chemicals kills the fun of pool ownership. Thanks for the insight.
Our chemicals are conventional. We simply find them under other labels far cheaper.
"Liquid Shock" is either ordinary ultra bleach or double-concentration.
"Total Alkalinity Raiser" is baking soda.
"pH Up!" is washing soda.
And, instead of pH Up! we use Borax so it doesn't impact T/A.
And, instead of Dry Acid or pH Down! we use Muriatic Acid.
B-B-B is a full-time method. You don't have to wait to implement it.
Last edited by CarlD; 05-24-2010 at 01:50 PM.
Carl
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