Re: Testing a SWG Pool
If you are not adding anything to raise the pH up but letting it occur naturally then the TA is not rising any appreciable amount. The reason the pH is rising is that you are gassing off C02.
Let me start at the beginning:
1) your pool is carbonated like a bottle of soda. The carbonation comes from the bicarbonates in the water. We call these bicarbonates TA and we do want some because they act as a pH buffer.
However if there is too high a concentration the tendency is for the pH to settle around 8.0 which is higher than we want.
2) by adding acid we convert some of the bicarbonates to carbon dioxide (pour vinegar on baking soda to see this happen!). We have just lowered the TA since TA is only the bicarbonate (and carbonate) part of the buffer.The other part is the carbon dioxide but this does not count as TA because carbon dioxide in water is an acid and not an alkali.(At normal pool pH most of the TA is in bicarbonate form but as pH goes higher some does convert to carbonate form.)
3) Carbon Dioxide in water is carbonic acid. This is the fizz in your soda!
Shake up the soda and it goes flat because we have outgassed the carbon dioxide. The pH has also gone up because we have decreased the amount of carbonic ACID (CO2 dissolved in water) that is present. Operative word here is acid.
So how do you shake up a pool? Aerate the water any way you can. Carbon dioxide will gas off without agitation but it takes a very long time. Aeration is just a way to speed it up. (If you leave a bottle of soda uncapped it will go flat in time but if you shake it you will cause it to go flat much quicker.
SO...When you add the acid and drop the pH you have lowered the TA. Period.
When you wait for the pH to rise naturally or put your finger on top of the pool and shake it up!
...er, I mean aerate the water in some way to speed the process up you raise the pH with no impact on TA.
Hope this is understandable.

Originally Posted by
dustybecca
Here are all of my readings
FC 0
pH 7.2
TA 200
TH 100
CYA 30
What am I doing wrong?

What is your salt level? If the salt is where it is supposed to be I would bump up the CYA to 50 and see if it helps. If not I suspect that your unit is not functioning properly.
Last edited by waterbear; 06-29-2010 at 06:50 PM.
Retired pool store and commercial pool maintenance guy.
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